Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University – David Newman (Dean of
Social Sciences and Humanities) making excuses for the
Boycott-Israel Assault Mob!
Why is it so difficult for Newman to understand
that his opinions and activism Must Lead to Israel being inundated
with tens of thousands of rockets fired from his beloved proposed
Palestinian State?
We can go on contesting each other's right to
be here, or we can – each of us – make those painful compromises
which require each of us to make do with only part of the territory
between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River. We each require
guarantees that the other side will no longer threaten our safety
and security, and that the human rights and democracy of both
peoples will be respected.
This will almost certainly require a clear line
of separation, a border...
There will now be renewed calls for sanctions,
BDS and boycotts by those groups who are continuously seeking ways
to delegitimize Israel. Only this time they will no longer be forced
to make a distinction between sovereign Israel and the "occupied
territories." By trying to justify an unjustifiable situation, all
we will have managed to do is to weaken even further the foundations
on which the sovereign state exists.
For all those of us out there in the battle to
deflect and defuse the boycott attempts, this report has just made
our task a hundred times more difficult. It has simply played into
the hands of our detractors, weakened even further our international
standing, and reflects the failed policies of a right-wing
government which is doing its best to lead Israel into a new era of
international isolation.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=277710
Borderline Views: To occupy or not to occupy
Why is it so difficult to understand that the growing Palestinians
people, regardless of whether they stretch back 2,000 or 200 years,
are here to stay?
By DAVID NEWMAN
16/7/2012
So what have we achieved by the publication of
a political report, under the guise of a
legal opinion, which arrived at a conclusion that the
occupied territories are not occupied, that the illegal settlements
are not illegal, and that everything
Israel has done in the
West
Bank (Judea and Samaria) during the past 45 years is
really okay? Now that the world has read this learned opinion, which
flies in the face of every other legal opinion, both Israeli and
international, from foe and friend alike, they are now sure to be
convinced that they have been wrong all along, that Israel is in the
right and they will now stop demanding the withdrawal of Israel from
the territories under dispute and the establishment of an
independent Palestinian State.
Of course, if the world refuses to accept this
dubious report, it is because they are all anti-Semites. Why else
would every considered legal opinion reject the conclusions of a
committee appointed by a right-wing government, whose objective,
from the outset, was to reach a political conclusions which would
fly in the face of the accepted discourse. Lets conveniently forget
the facts – that Israel's control of the West Bank is based on
military conquest (even if it was in a legitimate war of self
defense), that all international conventions forbid the transfer of
civilian population to territories which are under military control,
and the little matter of a Palestinian people numbering well over
two million (in the West Bank alone) who do not share the basic
rights of autonomy, equality and independence, which lie at the
heart of what Israel's own democracy is all about.
It is true that the West Bank is different to
most other territories under dispute in today's world. It does not
face the contradiction of self-determination and secession which is
common in many other disputed areas. While the entire world,
including many Israeli governments of recent years, recognizes the
rights to Palestinian self determination, the problem of secession –
the desire to separate from the state and to establish an
independent state, does not apply.
Regardless of whether the area is defined as
"administered" or "occupied," the area is not, never has been, part
of the recognized
sovereign territory of the State of Israel.
Neither was Jordan the sovereign power between
1949- 1967. On almost all international and neutral maps, the West
Bank is defined correctly as a "territory without formal
jurisdiction – to be determined," with no one at present exercising
sovereignty in the accepted sense of international statehood.
And all past Israeli governments, including
those of rightwing leaders such as Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir
and Ariel Sharon, knew exactly why they did not pass laws in the
Knesset annexing the West Bank and Gaza to Israel.
They knew that Israel had no legal right to lay
claims to sovereignty, that the long-term demographic implications
for the Jewish State would be disastrous and that, anyway,
absolutely no one in the world – friend or foe – would ever
recognize such claims just because they were passed in the Israeli
Knesset – thus bringing the country's parliament and democracy into
international disrepute.
THERE IS no need to prove the historical phases
through which this region has passed. The West Bank, or in its more
correct historical and geographical term, Judea and Samaria, has
strong historical connections with the Jewish people. The Bible
narrative is focused on this area, as expressed through the choice
of Biblical names (such as
Shilo, Bet El, Elon Moreh – to name just a few) to
rename the Jewish settlements. Judea and Samaria were as much part
of ancient Jewish and Israelite kingdoms as parts of the coastal
plain, where the overwhelming majority of the residents of the State
of Israel reside, never were.
But I know of no one who is prepared to trade
the densely populated hill regions of the West Bank for the Tel Aviv
metropolitan area. For almost 2,000 years we were absent and during
that time, other peoples came and went, created new realities, and
the fact that their antecedents may not be as long as those of the
Jewish people is totally irrelevant to the
contemporary political and geopolitical realities.
The miracle of the Jewish return to its ancient
homeland took place within certain territorial configurations, was
accepted and eventually supported by the international community.
But this did not include the area of the West Bank, neither in the
UN Partition resolution or in the outcome of Israel's War of
Independence – both of which constitute our contemporary claim to
sovereignty and international legitimacy.
WHY DO we insist on playing with semantics
rather than make a real attempt forge a political solution which
will ensure greater stability and security for both peoples? We need
to get back to basics and understand the political and demographic
implications of the contemporary realities.
Why is it so difficult to understand that the
growing Palestinians people, regardless of whether they stretch back
2,000 or 200 years, are here to stay. They are not going to
disappear into Jordan and the Saudi Arabian desert tomorrow, just as
the Jewish people are not going to be swallowed up (or pushed into)
the Mediterranean Sea or return to their European Diaspora. Each of
us is here to stay – and the options ahead are actually much more
simple than the complexities of the legal and the historical
arguments would have us believe.
We can go on contesting each other's right to
be here, or we can – each of us – make those painful compromises
which require each of us to make do with only part of the territory
between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River. We each require
guarantees that the other side will no longer threaten our safety
and security, and that the human rights and democracy of both
peoples will be respected.
This will almost certainly require a clear line
of separation, a border, but this is becoming increasingly difficult
to demarcate as more and more settlements are constructed throughout
the region. The border has become increasingly blurred and the
two-state solution has become almost impossible to implement.
The only problem with this is that all other
alternatives – ranging from a one-state solution which will no
longer be a Jewish State or the continuation of long-term occupation
which will bring us ever closer to apartheid – are even worse.
The farcical claim, after 45 years of Israeli
administration, that suddenly everything is legal and that there is
no longer an occupation has not convinced a single person to change
their position. What it has done however is to worsen, even further,
Israel's position and image in a world which has always questioned
Israel's right to continue to control and administer a territory
captured in a war almost 50 years ago.
There will now be renewed calls for sanctions,
BDS and boycotts by those groups who are continuously seeking ways
to delegitimize Israel. Only this time they will no longer be forced
to make a distinction between sovereign Israel and the "occupied
territories." By trying to justify an unjustifiable situation, all
we will have managed to do is to weaken even further the foundations
on which the sovereign state exists.
For all those of us out there in the battle to
deflect and defuse the boycott attempts, this report has just made
our task a hundred times more difficult. It has simply played into
the hands of our detractors, weakened even further our international
standing, and reflects the failed policies of a right-wing
government which is doing its best to lead Israel into a new era of
international isolation.
The writer is dean of the faculty of
Humanities and Social Sciences at Ben-Gurion University and editor
of the international journal Geopolitics. The views expressed are
his alone.
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