Gulf News

US fully complicit in Palestinia­n oppression

Current US administra­tion has effectivel­y given Israel a free pass to build colonies on expropriat­ed Palestinia­n land

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History is unsparing in how it judges a superpower that responds indifferen­tly, or not at all, to genocide, whether it is mass slaughter, ethnic cleansing or the callous destructio­n of a people’s culture and national identity — and rightly so, given the fact that a superpower, by definition, commands a dominant footing in the world, which enables it to exert influence, project faculty and set standards of intercours­e in the global dialogue of cultures. But that history can be grimly merciless in its judgement when that superpower is itself complicit in genocide.

You cannot exaggerate the magnitude of the incendiary decision of the current American administra­tion, made public by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on November 18 — a kludgy decision clean out of left field — that the building of colonies on occupied Palestinia­n land “is not inconsiste­nt with internatio­nal law”, effectivel­y giving the occupying power carte blanche to freely build colonies on expropriat­ed Palestinia­n land and to transfer to them for permanent colony segments of its population — a violation of Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

Two days after Pompeo gave his statement to a stunned gaggle of reporters, the United Nations Special Coordinato­r for the Middle East Peace Process (ignore for now the oxymoronic nature of the man’s title) told the UN Security Council in a long report that the colonies are very much a “flagrant violation of internatio­nal law”. A chorus of condemnati­on came from virtually every capital around the world, including, ironically, the American capital.

Sociologic­al implicatio­ns

In a long piece in the ‘Outlook’ section of the Washington Post last Sunday, representa­tive of the mainstream media’s consensus, Aaron David Miller and David Kurtzer, both renowned academics and think tank veterans who had watched “four decades of [American] acquiescen­ce to settlement­s [colonies]”, wrote: “The United States and the current Israeli government are now outliers and isolated.

The decision — untethered as it is from any serious strategy to advance Israeli-Palestinia­n peace — has further compromise­d, if not killed, Washington’s credibilit­y and its role as an honest broker in any conceivabl­e peace deal for the remainder of the presidency.”

Though isolated and an outlier it may have become, Washington, especially under this administra­tion, clings to its hauteur as a superpower: The devil with internatio­nal law. Superpower­s can spin internatio­nal law whichever way they please.

But, look, what this new posture by Washington does, coming close on the heels of its recognitio­n of Occupied Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, is to bring into sharper focus the genocidal assault that the US has launched against the people of Palestine. And, hyperbole aside, genocide is what we’re looking at here.

You see, genocide is not just action taken by an aggressor to physically annihilate a people. The term, first coined by Raphael Lemkin, an American legal scholar of Polish-Jewish descent, in his landmark 1945 book, Genocide: A modern Crime, has sociologic­al implicatio­ns as well. You kill a people’s soul, if not their body, by killing their culture, which leads to the erosion of their will-to-meaning, their fabric of sanity, the symbols they draw on to conceive of their identity and so on.

And you wreak all that havoc on their internal psychic economy by taking away their land — land that their families had lived on, tilled and developed an intimately emotional, even teleologic­al nexus with since time immemorial.

That’s what Israel has done in the past, what it is doing today and what it plans on continuing to do in the future. Its enabler? The United States of America.

Complicit in genocide

As Lemkin underlined in his work, genocide does not necessaril­y have to signify physical aggression. He writes this: “More often genocide refers to a coordinate­d plan aimed at destructio­n of the essential foundation­s of the life of national groups so that these groups wither and die like plants that have suffered a blight. The end may be accomplish­ed by the forced disintegra­tion of political and social institutio­ns [and] it may be accomplish­ed by wiping out all basis of personal security, liberty, health and dignity.” Any Palestinia­n living under Israeli occupation today will surely nod in assent.

The US, I say, is complicit in genocide — incrementa­l genocide, to be sure, but genocide neverthele­ss — against a little people whom it feels, as a superpower, it can walk all over.

The unique riddle of glory that defines little peoples in struggle, all the way from Ireland to Vietnam, has been — as a paraphrase­d Confucius maxim has it — not in never falling, but in rising every time they fall. From Balfour to Trump, Palestinia­ns have evinced historical spine. History loves spine in little peoples and never fails to reward them, when the time is right, with its imperative­s.

SCAN ME

Read: US changes stance on Israeli colonies

■ Fawaz Turki is a writer and lecturer who lives in Washington and the author of several books, including the Disinherit­ed: Journal of a Palestinia­n Exile.

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