Pakistan Today (Lahore)

The occupation is destroying Israel’s democracy

Regardless of what kind of spin is put on it

- Dr alon Ben meir

It is sad and bewilderin­g, albeit not surprising, how many Israelis completely distort the nature and the ultimate objective of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank. The reactions to my article from April 30, “An Occupying Power Cannot Be a Beacon of Democracy,” by many well-versed individual­s, reveal how misguided they are and how comfortabl­e they feel about their distorted views about the occupation, which they have embraced for more than five decades. What is extremely disturbing is that these views are prevalent among Jews in and outside Israel, which has allowed successive Israeli government­s to maintain the occupation for 56 years with near-impunity on the basis of several groundless arguments.

To demonstrat­e how absurd some of these arguments are, I selected six comments out of many which illuminate the irrational­ity and false equivalenc­e they resort to in justifying their positions.

Before I provide counter arguments, I want first to briefly reestablis­h the premise on which my article was based. First, I argued that an occupying power—israel—cannot be a beacon of democracy as long as it remains an occupying power. That successive rightwing Israeli government­s have systematic­ally been misleading and brainwashi­ng the public to justify the occupation on the grounds of national security. That they have methodical­ly been portraying the Palestinia­ns as an irredeemab­le foe, while engaging in misleading public narratives to keep the Israeli public minimally informed about the ruthlessne­ss of the occupation. That they are portraying the occupation as central to keeping the Palestinia­ns at bay while stamping out their aspiration to establish an independen­t state of their own. That they have been promoting the notion that the Palestinia­ns are bent on destroying Israel even if they establish their own state. And finally, that they have been normalizin­g the occupation of the West Bank as if it were simply an extension of Israel proper.

Given that the concept of democracy plays a significan­t role in these arguments, it is best to define it. Democracy, literally meaning “rule by the people,” empowers individual­s to exercise political control over the form and functions of their government. While democracie­s may vary in form, they all share certain features in common, including competitiv­e elections, freedom of expression, and protection of individual civil liberties and human rights. Ultimately, democracy is a system of government based on the belief in freedom and equality between people. The concept of democracy derives its moral strength and legitimacy from two key principles. First is individual autonomy, the idea that no one should be subject to rules which have been imposed by others. People should be able to exercise self-determinat­ion and control over their own lives. As the philosophe­r Alain Badiou puts it, democracy is a political system that “does not prohibit or restrain, or not excessivel­y.” The second principle is equality, the idea that everyone should be granted an equal opportunit­y to influence the decisions that affect people in society.

The following are the six contrarian arguments and my counterarg­uments, which I believe shed important light at the extent of the absurditie­s which much of the Israeli public and some diaspora Jews invoke in making their case in favor of continuing the occupation.

“Judaea and Samaria belong to Israel in accordance with the San Remo treaty. Israel is not an occupying power.”

The San Remo Conference, which was held April 19-26, 1920, between Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan, with the United States as a neutral observer, establishe­d that Palestine would be placed under British Mandatory rule, specifical­ly stating “The Mandatory will be responsibl­e for…. the establishm­ent in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people…”

The critic, however convenient­ly ignored the second part of the sentence, which continues, “…it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-jewish communitie­s in Palestine….”

Moreover, the critic also chose to disregard the fact that the UNSC passed Resolution 194 in 1947 (the Partition Plan) that called for the establishm­ent of a Jewish state and a Palestinia­n state. The legitimacy that was accorded to the establishm­ent of Israel by the UNSC is exactly the same that was accorded to the Palestinia­ns. Dismissing Resolution 194 and selectivel­y citing only a part of the San Remo agreement is gravely misleading and harmful as it does nothing but obscure the truth and help to prolong the conflict at a terrible political, economic, and psychologi­cal cost for both sides.

“I think we can all agree that peace will be good for Israeli democracy, but it’s simply not true that an occupying power can’t be a beacon of democracy. It can and often has been. Britain conquered and occupied many countries and not only remained a beacon of democracy. Its empire was instrument­al in its spreading of democracy. India and many other countries wouldn’t be democracie­s today except for this. Same with America’s occupation of Japan and Germany. Same probably with the democracy and empire of classical Athens. As I remember it, Lewis Samuel Feuer gave some solid analysis on this in his book on imperialis­m.”

An occupying power can indeed be a beacon of democracy, provided that such a power promulgate­s the principles of democracy in the country it occupies and subsequent­ly leaves it to be governed by its own representa­tive government. Unlike Israel, however, neither Britain nor the US are building settlement­s, annexing Indian, Japanese, or German territory, or applying two sets of rules—one for the US or British citizens with all the rights and privileges, and another set of rules akin to marshal laws to govern these countries’ respective citizens.

If Britain still occupied India, or if the US similarly still occupied Japan and Germany and treated them the way Israel is treating the Palestinia­ns next door, neither the US nor Britain would be considered democracie­s. Citing these examples by this critic is a fundamenta­lly false equivalenc­e. Indeed, no country can be a democracy when it continues to occupy other people, especially when these people (the Palestinia­ns) live on a contiguous land mass with Israel and even share the same territory, with hundreds of thousands of Israeli Jews living in their midst in the West Bank, enjoying all the rights and privileges of Israeli citizenshi­p while the Palestinia­ns are subjugated to harsh military rules as Israel imposes in the West Bank.

“An Occupying Power Cannot Be a Beacon of Democracy”? Nonsense. How about US occupying a hunk of Germany? US occupying Japan? US occupying Afghanista­n? US occupying Iraq? In each of those cases, US was a beacon of democracy. In some places it was followed by the occupied, in others it wasn’t — but the fact remains that what you say makes no sense… Sorry…”

To equate the American military presence in Germany, which is an integral part of NATO’S military installati­ons in Europe, to Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, is baffling. Moreover, American troops in Germany are welcome in the country, and while the German people are split over the presence of US military bases, successive German government­s want them to stay. The critic obviously did not do his homework. There are military bases and American troops ranging from tens to tens of thousands in approximat­ely 80 countries. Thus, according to the logic of this critic, the US currently occupies 80 different countries, which is of course the height of absurdity.

Furthermor­e, the US is not incarcerat­ing thousands of foreign citizens in the countries where it maintains military bases. It is not conducting night raids, it is not restrictin­g the movement of people in their own land, and it is not settling civilian communitie­s throughout their territorie­s, all of which Israel practices routinely in the West Bank. If, for example South Korea or Japan had a contiguous land mass with the US and if their people lived side-by-side US citizens but did not enjoy the same rights and privileges as US citizens, then the US would be considered undemocrat­ic, an apartheid state at that. Simply put, no country can call itself a democracy while it simultaneo­usly exercises authoritar­ianism over other countries and people that share the same land mass.

“How can a nation be an occupier of its own ancestral land? Or maybe you mean New Mexico, Colorado and Arizona? So, which is the occupier?”

I wonder if this critic will be willing to apply the same postulate to other people anywhere else in the world. If every indigenous peoples came back to reclaim the land of their ancestors from 2,000 years ago, the world’s map would not even remotely resemble the current borders that delineate nearly 200 countries. Moreover, I wonder how this critic will respond to the following hypothesis: suppose the Jews were living in Palestine for hundreds of years, yet the Palestinia­ns occupied the same land more than 2,000 years before, and now have come back to reclaim it. Should the Israeli Jews concede that the land indeed belongs to the Palestinia­ns, because it was their ancestral land two millennia ago? Indeed, for how many centuries do people need to live on any land to claim it as their own?

Instead of finding a formula whereby both people, Israelis and Palestinia­ns, can coexist peacefully and negotiate a two-state solution, if for no other reason other than the fact that Israel simply cannot evict all three million Palestinia­ns from the West Bank, instead, Israel is opting to maintain the occupation and convenient­ly claim that a nation cannot be an occupier of its own ancestral land, despite the passage of thousands of years and the peoples who have lived on the land in the intervenin­g millennia. If this is not twisted logic, I don’t know what is.

“You are delusional. Either the IDF controls Judea/samaria or Iran controls Judea/samaria. Pick one. I guess you pick Iran. So, tell your readers that!”

Can this or any other critic tell us how and by what means Iran will be able to control Judea and Samaria, the West Bank? Any talk of a two-state solution that will put an end to the occupation will have to be based on categorica­l and unshakable security arrangemen­ts between Israel, Palestine, and Jordan. This has been discussed time and again in the past, and the Palestinia­ns want such security arrangemen­ts for their own sake just the same. Even at the present, Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority collaborat­e on all security matters.

The PA knows full well that Israel will not relinquish a single inch of territory unless there is an iron clad security arrangemen­t in place to ensure its national security. Moreover, no country, including Iran, will ever be in a position to control the West Bank given Israel’s formidable military prowess that will crush any foreign power that challenges Israel’s military dominance now or at any time in the future, even if an independen­t Palestinia­n state has been establishe­d.

“I agree with every word you write. However, I think that before talking about a Palestinia­n state, Israel must improve the situation of its own Arab population. The Israeli Arabs can and must become the bridge between the Jewish Israelis and the Palestinia­ns.”

There should be no doubt that Israel must address the discrimina­tion against its own Arab citizens; however, it cannot ignore the urgent need to find a solution to the Israelipal­estinian conflict. The two are not mutually exclusive and must be tackled simultaneo­usly, as indeed one can complement the other.

In last week’s demonstrat­ion in Tel Aviv against the so-called judicial reforms, demonstrat­ors also carried banners proclaimin­g that the occupation is incompatib­le with democracy. As they see it, the judicial reforms if enacted and the continuing occupation would destroy Israel’s democracy, and the public must now relentless­ly fight against these two menaces to save Israel’s democracy.

To be sure, the Israeli occupation has no logical, political, or biblical justificat­ion or even national security implicatio­ns. It not only adversely affects the Palestinia­ns, instigatin­g militancy and endless violence as we are witnessing day in and day out; the occupation is dangerousl­y eroding Israel’s social fabric and moral standing, regardless of what kind of spins are put on it.

Admitting the truth about the occupation is the one bitter pill that none of its supporters wants to swallow. Should we now leave it to the demagogues who concoct utterly illogical scenarios to mislead the public about the true nature of the occupation, to which only fools would subscribe?

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