Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University – Neve Gordon
(Dept of Political Science) calls Israel an “apartheid regime”;
ignores Jewish “Right of Settlement” recognized by the British
Mandate; calls all settlements in Judea and Samaria “illegal”
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1244371077754&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Can Obama save
Israel from itself?
Neve Gordon , THE
JERUSALEM POST
Jun. 11, 2009
Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu is beginning to sweat.
Notwithstanding
the agreement between US President Barack Obama and Netanyahu on
issues such as the recognition of Israel as a Jewish state and the
insistence that the Palestinians renounce violence, there are points
of serious contention between the two leaders.
These include
Obama's position that the two-state solution is the only way to
resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, his demand that Israel
stop building settlements and his intimation that all the
settlements are illegal.
Other points of
strife include Obama's call for regional nuclear nonproliferation
(which, in effect, assumes that Israel's nuclear capacity will be
part of the negotiations with Iran), his recognition of the plight
of Palestinians, including the refugees, and his claim that Hamas is
a legitimate rather than a terrorist organization.
So far Obama's
challenges to Israel have been theoretical, and the only substantive
demand that Washington has made involves the 100 or so Jewish
outposts in the West Bank. Reiterating President Bush's directive,
Obama recently asked Netanyahu to begin dismantling the outposts.
Legally the
outposts are just like the 121 settlements (namely, they are all
illegal). Only the outposts were built following the 1993 Oslo
Accords, and, as opposed to the settlements, which are now home to
close to half a million Jews - or about 7 percent of Israel's
citizenry - almost all the outposts are extremely sparsely populated
with less than a dozen people in each.
Netanyahu did not
refuse, but instead of carrying out the job, he decided to put on a
show.
Last week, the
government sent troops to dismantle two outposts. The television
networks were invited to cover the event, and that evening viewers
watched how a group of settlers struggled against the most powerful
military in the Middle East. Within hours of the news broadcasts,
the settlers had already rebuilt the outposts, and thus today we
are, once again, back to square one.
The perceptive
viewer understands that the government and the settlers are staging
the events, using the media to broadcast them to the world. The
images of lawless fundamentalists fighting the military convey a
clear message to the audience at home: If Netanyahu dares to
dismantle the outposts, the settlers will not only topple his
government, but there will be blood. More specifically, the
not-so-latent inference is that if Netanyahu goes ahead with
Washington's directive, he will be responsible for a civil war.
While all of the
major news networks provided a similar narrative, Channel 2, the
most popular news provider, dedicated 14 minutes of prime time to
the issue. In the segment, a reporter is shown interviewing a
settler from Karnei Shomron in the West Bank about the dismantlement
of Jewish outposts. The two men are standing on a mountain ridge
overlooking Palestinian fields that had been set on fire.
The settler
asserts that "this is the price tag... People need to know that if
they dismantle anything in Judea and Samaria, there is a price." He
then looks at the horizon and asks, "Do you see all these
mountains?" and immediately responds, "They are all ours."
When the reporter
inquires what the settlers will do if a nearby outpost is
dismantled, he exclaims that the government will not destroy it, and
then adds, "They might destroy a little shack in the outpost to send
pictures to the n***** in the United States."
The crux of the
matter is that this pathetic, racist settler is right: The images of
troops dismantling a few outposts and the forceful resistance are
all part of a well choreographed spectacle that is being produced
specifically for Washington. Otherwise, why remove only two outposts
at a time instead of 40 at once and getting the job done? And why
invite the networks to cover the events and not dismantle the
outposts by surprise in the early morning hours when the settlers
are not ready?
The answer is
straightforward: Netanyahu wants Obama to think that Israel will end
up in a civil war if the White House stands firm.
The question now
is whether Obama will back off or whether he will he have the
courage to make Netanyahu dismantle both the outposts and the
settlements. If Obama hesitates, Israel will become a full blown
apartheid regime, while if he remains bold he will probably be
remembered as the president who helped save Israel from itself. To
do so he will have to make Netanyahu sweat much more.
Neve Gordon
teaches politics at Ben-Gurion University and is the author of
Israel's Occupation (University of California Press, 2008).
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