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Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv
University - Ran HaCohen (Dept of Comparative
Literature) declares war on Loyalty to Israel
http://original.antiwar.com/hacohen/2009/07/19/fascism-needs-an-enemy/
Fascism
Needs an Enemy
Posted By Ran HaCohen
July 19, 2009
Critically thinking Israelis – a
negligible minority – already know the pattern: no matter how
extreme our new prime minister is, it won’t take more than a couple
of months for the media to portray him as the sane, moderate, and
pragmatic leader of the political center. If even the
warrior General Sharon could be reborn as "a
Man of Peace," why can’t Netanyahu? The landmark was his "Bar
Ilan Speech" of June 14, after which mainstream Israeli
columnists, lead by the pathetic
Ari Shavit (Ha’aretz) and his lowbrow twin brother Ya’ir
Lapid (Yedioth Achronot), all resorted to ludicrous
narratives of Rebirth, Revolution, and Rubicon for the allegedly new
leader of peace-loving Israel.
One can expect little else from the
Israeli mainstream, blinded as it is by decades of indoctrination
and vested interests, or from Israel’s
President Peres, whose political lexicon never included the T of
Truth. But the world should be warned. Unlike Lebanon or Iran,
Israel has not moved a single step forward in the Obama Era. On the
contrary: With the rogue triumvirate of Netanyahu, Barak, and
Lieberman, Israel is now ruled by the most nationalist, racist, and
fanatical government it has ever had. On top of that, the main
opposition party, led by the ultra-nationalist Livni and the
opportunistic professional soldier Mofaz, offers yet another
duplicate of the government’s narrative, so that the ever narrower
public discourse is framed by two ideological and political twins,
offering no alternative whatsoever. In fact, the Israeli far Right
has now more than 80 percent of the seats in the Knesset – the rest
being the Arab parties, Meretz, and a dubious dissenting faction
within Labor. Thus the Israeli media consumer is not even
exposed to anything but nationalist at best, racist at worst,
anti-Palestinian, anti-peace, pro-occupation brainwashing.
Make no mistake: Netanyahu is a man of
the occupation, as he always has been. Listen to Netanyahu’s
ideological mentor, his father Prof. Benzion Netanyahu, who openly
said his son would
never agree to a Palestinian state; as Netanyahu told his
father, he placed so many conditions on his offer at Bar Ilan in
order to make it unacceptable to the Palestinians. It is yet to be
seen whether Netanyahu’s anti-peace tactic will be
eternal peace talks that go nowhere or whether he will attempt
Barak’s "unmasking"
gambit. But giving up the occupied territories and ending Israel’s
colonialism is clearly not on the agenda. Just two weeks before
Netanyahu’s "historic" two-states speech, the Knesset endorsed a
decision against a Palestinian state, which
enraged Jordanians by claiming Jordan is the Palestinian state.
Indeed, the initiator did not come from within Netanyahu’s coalition
but from a fascist party on the further Right, but his bill,
overwhelmingly endorsed 53-9, was raised just a few days after a
Knesset conference on "alternatives to the two-states solution"
organized by a member of Netanyahu’s Likud Party.
Therefore, expecting Israel to stop or
even freeze settlement activity just because President Obama says to
is just as unrealistic as expecting al-Qaeda to lay down its arms
for the same reason. Israel’s most dishonest minds – above all
Defense Minister Barak – do their best to find a "formula" that will
enable them to continue the organized Israeli land-robbery in the
West Bank – be it "natural growth," "settlement blocks," "temporary
freezing," or similar lies. The dispossession must not be stopped.
After all, the settlements are by far the most central project of
the state of Israel, and they have been so for the past four
decades, that is, for two-thirds of
Israel’s history, to the extent that
Israel has clearly become the tail wagged by its own colonialism.
The Old-New Target: Israeli
Palestinians
Ignoring the new winds blowing from
Washington, the Israeli zealots are so self-confident that they
consider the occupation a fait accompli: they have no doubt
that just as Israel has managed to dupe the world and double the
number of illegal settlers since the Oslo "Peace Process" began, it
will succeed in keeping the occupied Palestinians – caged and
impoverished in the West Bank, enslaved and starved in Gaza – under
Israel’s abusive boot for decades to come. Their optimism may be
justified: Obama has a very long way to go to prove he is serious.
Given this self-confidence, and given
the fact that the Palestinian armed struggle has been contained,
Israel’s energies of hatred are now turned toward another enemy: the
Israeli Arabs, the approximately 20 percent-strong minority of
Palestinians with Israeli citizenship. Israel is engaged in a
full-fledged campaign aimed at delegitimizing and further excluding
the Israeli Palestinians. The trend did not begin with Netanyahu,
but it can now rely on a highly supportive parliament and
leadership.
Netanyahu’s Bar-Ilan speech was
symptomatic, introducing a central new demand from the occupied
Palestinians as a condition for letting them have a (castrated)
state: they must first recognize Israel "as a Jewish state." This
sounds idiotic: Does Israel need an outside entity to define its own
character? But the real targets behind this condition are the
Israeli Palestinians. Demanding the occupied Palestinians to
recognize Israel’s Jewishness plays them off against the Israeli
Palestinians: You want your own state? First turn your back on your
brothers inside Israel and thwart their demands to full equality
within Israel. If even Abu Mazen states Israel is "a Jewish state,"
Arab Israelis cannot demand full equality, and if they do, we’ll
tell them to piss off across the border. As a precondition to
discuss ending their colonization, the Palestinians must submit
themselves to the classic colonialist strategy of divide-and-rule.
But Netanyahu’s new condition is aimed
predominantly at Jewish-Israeli ears: it turns the attention from
the occupied territories to Israel proper, implying that "our real
problem" is on the inside, with those inherently disloyal "Israeli
Arabs." That’s where Netanyahu meets and carries out Lieberman’s
fascist election slogan "No loyalty, no citizenship."
Netanyahu’s speech is just the tip of
the iceberg. The war against the Israeli Palestinians is much wider
than that. It is felt in the judicial system, where for example a
Jewish farmer who shot Arab burglars in the back while they were
fleeing from his farm, killing one and wounding another, was
acquitted (and is now celebrated as a national hero). As Orly Noy
writes (YNet,
in Hebrew), "given the judicial and public atmosphere in Israel
these days, nothing is more predictable than the acquittal of a Jew
who exercised violence, even extreme, against an Arab citizen." In
another case, a Jewish man who
murdered a taxi driver just because he was Arab was deemed
"unfit to face trial." A senior army officer who ordered his soldier
to
shoot a handcuffed, blindfolded Palestinian at point-blank range
was merely accused of "improper conduct." This accusation was found
unreasonable even by the Israeli Supreme Court.
The discrimination against Israeli
Arabs, of course, is not new; even the official Israeli
Or Commission stated in 2003 that "government handling of the
Arab sector has been primarily neglectful and discriminatory." But
whereas the early 2000s could give the impression the discrimination
was diminishing, the last years show an opposite movement. The
landmark seems to be the amendment to the naturalization law of
December 2003, which bars Palestinians from the occupied territories
from obtaining any residency status or citizenship in Israel through
marriage to an Israeli citizen, thereby preventing them from living
in Israel with their spouses. Heavily criticized by Israeli and
international human rights groups, the law is aimed exclusively
against Israel’s Palestinian minority, whose members often marry
across the Green Line.
The flow of laws and regulations
against Israeli Arabs increased exponentially. A year ago, a
forgotten British Mandate regulation from 1939,
banning the import of books printed in enemy countries, was
suddenly revived, closing the import gates on Arabic schoolbooks and
all kinds of literature printed in Lebanon (a major publishing
center in Arabic) and other Arab countries. No security issues are
at stake: all imported books are subject to censorship anyway.
A similar provocation is the
transportation minister’s recent order to
wipe Arabic place names off road signs, replacing them with
their Hebrew names. Thus place names, including those of mixed or
Arab towns like Yaffa (Jaffa) or Shafa’amr, should be publicly
spelled in Arabic (!) according to their Hebrew form – Yafo or
Shefar’am. While all over the world, from Canada to Australia,
former colonialist nations recognize and respect the cultural
heritage of, the rights of, and the evils done to indigenous
minorities, colonialist Israel is eager to wipe them out –
politically, culturally, and physically.
A further attack on the
Israeli-Palestinian minority is the suggested law to ban the
commemoration of the Nakba, the catastrophe in 1948 in which
hundreds of Palestinian villages were destroyed and hundreds of
thousands became refugees. Though its original form, including
jailing individuals who do commemorate it, has been softened to a
formulation forbidding only public-supported organs from
commemorating the event, the intention is clear – as was that of the
(currently rejected) law demanding a declaration of loyalty from
every Israeli citizen.
The attack on Israel’s Palestinian
minority has deep ideological roots in extreme nationalistic purism,
but it is mainly politically motivated. The Israeli Arabs, despite
six decades of discrimination, have been an incredibly loyal
minority. The Israeli right-wing clearly wishes to put an end to
this loyalty, hoping the incitement will lead Israeli Arabs to some
form of violent resistance, from street violence to terror attacks.
This would create the desired atmosphere of suspicion, fear, and
hatred that fascism always needs in order to flourish. An
Arab-Israeli Intifada is the wet dream of many Israeli
right-wingers: nationally and internationally, it would enable them
to present Israel once again as a threatened victim of
Arab/Muslim/Gentile persecution, not as the rogue colonialist
regional power it actually is.
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