The growing clamor for ethnic cleansing
by Ali Abunimah
The Electronic Intifada
www.electronicintifada.net/features/articles/020828ali.shtml
(AMMAN -- August 27, 2002) -- An Israeli organization has published
detailed plans for the "complete elimination of the Arab demographic
threat to Israel" by forcibly expelling all Palestinians, including
Palestinians in the occupied territories and Palestinian citizens of
Israel from the area between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean
Sea within a 3-5 year period.
Gamla, a group founded by former Israeli military officers and
settlers, published these recommendations on its website in a nine
thousand word manifesto titled "The logistics of transfer," penned
by Boris Shusteff last July 3. The mass ethnic cleansing of every
Palestinian, the author argues, is "the only possible solution" to
the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and is "substantiated by the
Torah." (www.gamla.org.il/english) Gamla receives tax deductible
contributions from a New York-based charity that claims that its
goal is greater Arab-Jewish tolerance.
The manifesto recognizes that Israel will never win widespread
support for expulsion, but argues that it needs "only a modicum of
support from its closest ally -- the United States," in order to
carry out the plan.
Under the plan, Israel would launch an information campaign and
increase economic strangulation of Palestinians in the occupied West
Bank and Gaza Strip to force them to leave "voluntarily." One
measure would be to deprive Palestinians of employment, literally
starving them out (one could say that this policy is already being
implemented). Palestinian citizens of Israel would face complete
apartheid and religious coercion as Israel would "pass a law that
will stipulate in some form that non-Jewish citizens of the state,
while retaining full and irrevocable civil rights, will have no
ability to participate in Israeli political life." Failing that, the
paper continues, "Israeli Arabs can be given one more option - to
convert to Judaism if they prefer to stay put."
At the same time, Israel will try to convince the international
community to establish a Palestinian state far away from Israel and
the occupied territories (in Iraq or Saudi Arabia). The author
writes that:
"Israel must make clear to the world community that, if a decision
cannot be made within 3 to 5 years to establish a state for the
Palestinian Arabs in some viable location, she will be forced to
start the forced expulsion of Arabs into Jordan and the Sinai."
The expulsion plan provides details about how this will be done, in
lightning military strikes:
"As an example, the relocation of a small settlement (1,000 people)
can be completed within a 48-hour period, similarly to a military
border-crossing operation. Israel will supply the relocated
community with temporary housing, water and electricity (providing
tents, a generator, water cisterns, etc.). The abandoned settlement
must be completely demolished level with the ground."
While Israel moves to implement the complete annexation of all the
occupied territories, it would, according to the plan, have to
subdue the population by carrying out war crimes and crimes against
humanity if any Palestinians try to resist:
"Any attempts on the part of the Arabs [Palestinians] to carry out
sabotage or terrorist activity must be immediately suppressed in the
most brutal way. It is possible, for example, to implement a
suggestion by Harvard Professor Alan Derschowitz, an American
liberal lawyer. With slight modification, it works as follows:
Israel issues a warning that, in a response to any terrorist attack,
she will immediately completely level an Arab village or settlement,
randomly chosen by a computer from a published list. The essence of
the idea is to make the Arabs completely responsible for their own
fate, and to make it clear that terrorism will not be merely
tolerated, but will be harshly punished. Along with the world
community, the Arabs will know precisely what will result if they
attack Jews. The use of a computer to select the place of the
Israeli response will put the Arabs and the Jews on a level footing.
The Jews do not know where the terrorists will strike, and the Arabs
will not know which one of their villages or settlements will be
erased in retaliation. The word "erased" very precisely reflects the
force of Israel's response. The Arabs residing there will be evicted
without compensation, all houses and buildings completely
demolished, and the settlement itself, with the help of bulldozers
and any other necessary equipment, will be leveled into a large
field. After the appearance of several such fields the Arabs will
lose any desire to commit terrorist attacks and the number of Arabs
wanting to leave Eretz Yisrael will certainly increase."
The only precedent for such a chilling and methodical approach to
ethnic cleansing would be the industrialized elimination of Jews
planned and carried out by Nazi Germany.
Are these words merely the ramblings of an extremist group carrying
no wide influence, or do they represent another step in legitimizing
discussion of a once taboo idea gaining broad-based support in
Israel and amongst some American Jewish organizations?
Gamla claims that it is "in the forefront of the battle for the land
of Israel, organizes activities, participates in demonstrations, and
publishes articles, posters and stickers for that cause," and that
"most of its activities are coordinated and joined with other
grassroots organizations of the national camp."
One of the group's three founders is Elyakim Haetzni, one of the
first and most prominent West Bank settlers who lives in Kiryat Arba
settlement near Hebron. Another was the late Lt. Colonel Shlomo
Baum, a founder of Israel's notorious Unit 101, which with the young
Ariel Sharon as its leader carried out the brutal massacre of dozens
of civilians in the Palestinian village of Qibya in 1954, among
other atrocities. The third, retired Colonel Moshe Leshem, also a
longtime spokesman for the settlers, has a show on Israel's settler
radio network "Arutz 7" along with Haetzni.
Gamla receives tax-deductible contributions from Americans through a
New York-based charity called PEF Israel Endowment Funds
(www.pefisrael.org) which states that its was established in 1922 by
Justice Louis Brandeis and Rabbi Stephen Wise. Among its stated
purposes is "promoting greater tolerance and understanding between
religious and secular communities and between Arabs and Jews." Under
this liberal guise, the organization appears to be channeling funds
to a group advocating the total destruction of a nation -- in other
words, genocide.
The Gamla website also frequently publishes and promotes the
writings of Daniel Pipes, a professional Arab-basher, and ubiquitous
guest on American television talk shows.
Within Israel, Palestinians are viewed as a "demographic threat"
across the political spectrum, the only difference being on how to
deal with this threat. For traditional leftists, "separation" is the
preferred option, while among the right-wing outright expulsion is
gaining support. The debate about the "demographic threat" is
carried out in overtly racist terms. In summer 2001, Haifa
University professor Arnon Sofer, renewed Israeli anxieties about
the fertility of Palestinian women with a study predicting that by
2020 non-Jews will be a majority west of the Jordan River. "Some
Israelis say," according to The Chicago Tribune, "that ticking below
the surface of the violent confrontation between Arab and Jew is a
silent bomb, a demographic bomb." Their solution is to adopt a
"Chinese rule" limiting the number of children Palestinians are
allowed to have. ("Birthrates alarm Israel," Chicago Tribune, April
21, 2002)
While lamenting that only the Moledet party, founded by the
assassinated Israeli tourism minister Rehavam Zeevi, openly
advocates expulsion, the Gamla paper takes heart that recent opinion
polls in Israel put support for some form of 'transfer' at 46% and
in some cases 60% depending on how the question is posed.
According to Professor Majid Al-Haj of Haifa University, the
struggle of Palestinian citizens of Israel is no longer primarily
about achieving equality with Jews within Israeli society, but has
reverted to a more basic struggle simply to remain in their homeland
against a rising tide of pro-transfer sentiment being freely
expressed in Israeli Jewish society. Al-Haj, one of the few true
Arab experts on Israeli society, speaking recently at the Jordan
University Center for Strategic Studies, cited as an example the
infamous conference in the Israeli town of Herzliya in November
2000, just months into the Intifada. At that meeting, more than
three hundred prominent Israeli intellectuals, former and sitting
generals and politicians, former prime ministers, and Israel's past
and sitting president openly discussed ideas including "exchanges of
population," limiting the democratic rights of Palestinian citizens,
forcing Palestinian citizens to sign a document recognizing Israel
as a Jewish state as a condition of retaining their citizenship, and
the primacy of Israel's "Jewish" over its "democratic" character.
The transfer idea is gaining ground because the common conception
that Jews should live separately from everyone else provides room
for it to flourish. Today there are almost no Jewish voices in
Israel calling for Palestinian-Israeli coexistence on the basis of
full equality regardless of religion or ethnic affiliation. One of
Israel's leading lights on the left, novelist A.B. Yehoshua, while
not supporting transfer, regards co-existence between Palestinians
and Israelis as a thing to behold with horror. "Two people in one
state," Yehoshua warned, "is a threat to our existence. Anyway, we
did not come to Israel to live in a bi-national state, but in a
Jewish state." ("Israel is losing the demographic race,"
Israeltoday.co.il) This view is typical of the Israeli left, the
vast majority of which only supports some form of Palestinian
statehood as a mechanism to preserve Jewish primacy. While in most
countries that practice it, democracy is understood as a mechanism
to protect minorities from the tyranny of the majority, among
Israeli liberals democracy is only valuable as a tool to maintain
the tyranny of a Jewish majority over a Palestinian minority without
the embarrassment of having to adopt formal apartheid or advocate
ethnic cleansing. We must be clear that the concern for maintaining
a Jewish majority is about preserving power and privilege, not about
protecting cultural identity, heritage and religious practice. Those
can be much better protected, and enhanced in a multi-ethnic society
where freedom of religion, speech and association are guaranteed to
all. At least that is what good Americans are brought up to believe.
The "demographic threat" comes not only from Muslim Palestinians,
but also from Christians. Last June Haaretz reported that Dr. Asher
Cohen of Bar-Ilan University had discovered that already Israel's
Jewish majority is "only" seventy two percent, far less than the
eighty one percent claimed by official figures. This difference is
accounted for by the high rate and relative ease of assimilation of
Christians from the former Soviet Union and guest-workers into
Israeli society, something that in most other countries claiming to
be liberal democracies would be seen as a desirable trend. In
response to Cohen's findings Israel's Interior Minister Eli Yishai
declared that "Clearly it's impossible to bar the arrival of couples
in which one of the members is Jewish, but we should see to it that
families that are completely Christian do not come here --including
people who go to church on a regular basis." ("Demographic balancing
acts," Haaretz, June 13, 2002)
This anti-Christian war cry was recently taken up by Israel's
Sephardi Chief Rabbi Eliyahu Bakshi-Doron and his Ashkenazi
counterpart Rabbi Israel Meir Lau, who warned that "seventy percent
of the new immigrants to Israel are professed non-Jews, with no
connection to Judaism." In a joint statement, the two clerics
concluded, "We cannot continue to bring entire Christian families to
Israel." (Chief rabbis call for revision to be made in Law of
Return," Haaretz, August 25, 2002)
The view that non-Jews, including the indigenous Palestinians, are a
mortal threat, a cancer, a bomb to be defused, echoes precisely the
language of racists and ethno-nationalists everywhere. Only the
claim of Israeli exceptionalism, and misuse of the memory of the
Nazi holocaust, has protected Israel from the censure it deserves
for allowing such views to flourish. The sheer breath-taking
hypocrisy is encapsulated by the Israeli government with Moledet
ethnic cleansing advocates amongst its ranks condemning European
countries like France and Austria for allowing racist parties to
grow too powerful.
A few years ago it would have been easy to dismiss the Gamla
document as the work of marginal extremists. But in today's Israel,
where pro-ethnic-cleansing ministers sit in the cabinet, and even
those who would not support transfer are opposed to co-existence and
equality, it is a worrying sign. Most of the brutal measures Israel
carries out today with nary a word of concern from the outside world
would have been unthinkable two years ago, including the mass
starvation of millions of besieged Palestinians. It would not be
surprising to see some of the measures proposed in the expulsion
manifesto adopted piecemeal as Israel's swing to the far right
continues unchecked.
The Gamla document is notable not because it raises ideas that no
one else in Israel is talking about, but rather because it tries to
take a generalized and growing clamor for transfer to the next level
-- detailed formulation of a specific program for the expulsion of
the Palestinians around which political support and action can be
organized. Extremists such as Gamla are closely tied with
'mainstream' politicians, and by running ahead of them can test the
waters and introduce ideas that the mainstream is not yet ready to
fully embrace.
It may not even be necessary for a majority of Israelis to support
expulsion for it to be carried out since the settler movement --
from which Gamla emerges -- has managed to wield disproportionate
influence on all Israeli governments, especially that of Sharon. For
example, while polls show that the majority of Israelis are in favor
of removing settlements in the occupied territories, the settlements
continue to grow, absorbing a disproportionate chunk of Israel's
budget even while unemployment and poverty within Israel itself are
spiraling. Former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is waiting
in the wings for Sharon to fall, has mortgaged himself even more to
these elements.
The expulsion plan's author may not be entirely deluded either, when
he banks on American support. Last May, Dick Armey the most senior
Republican in the United States Congress openly advocated the ethnic
cleansing of Palestinians on MSNBC's Hardball, while the usually
bland USA Today newspaper published a February op-ed by one Emanuel
Winston calling for the "resettling" of the Palestinians in Jordan.
Neither of these calls elicited the slightest protest from
mainstream commentators and politicians in the United States. As
extreme as President Bush's support for Israel has become, it
appears moderate next to that of so-called Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, who stated recently that Israel should be able to
keep the "so-called occupied territories" because it won them fair
and square in a war. When Hillary Clinton, New York's "liberal"
Senator, visited Israel earlier this year, she was hosted by and
warmly embraced Benny Elon, the leader of the Moledet ethnic
cleansing party.
The Sharon government's egging on of the United States to bring
forward its attack on Iraq cannot be motivated solely by fear of
Iraqi "weapons of mass destruction," since Israeli intelligence
assessments downplay the actual threat from the devastated Iraqi
armed forces. It may not be far-fetched to speculate that some
within Israel would see a regional war as the only opportunity to
carry out a round of expulsions, and delay the day when the
"demographic bomb" explodes.
Theodor Herzl, writing Zionism's founding tract, "The Jewish State"
recognized that his dream of taking over Palestine could not be
fulfilled without transfer. Herzl famously declared "We shall try to
spirit the penniless [Arab] population across the border by
procuring employment for it in the transit countries, while denying
it employment in our country." Recent scholarship by Israelis and
others, and fifty four years of the lived reality of Palestinians
bear uncontestable witness to the fact that mass expulsion has
always been part of Israel's strategy and practice. Whether it will
become so again is anybody's guess, but the warning signs are there
to be heeded.
Ali Abunimah
www.abunimah.org
www.electronicintifada.net
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