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Bar Ilan University -
Menachem Klein (Dept of Political Science) thinks it is Israel's
fault that the Arab world is so anti-democratic
It seems clear that Israel welcomes the
Arab Spring with a very cold shoulder. Israel has traditionally
preferred to maintain close relations with non-democratic monarchs
and dictators, rather than communicating with the people. Israel's
security, according to this view, is assured first by its own force,
and second by strong Arab leaders who agree to cooperate secretly or
openly with Israel.
Netanyahu's deep suspicions about the
authenticity of the Arab masses' awakening are accompanied by a
sharp division between "us" (Israel) and "them" (the Arab masses).
According to Netanyahu, Israel has always embraced democracy, but
the Arabs have not yet. "Israel stands out. It is different,"
exclusive and without doubt better. "Israel is not what is wrong
about the Middle East. Israel is what is right about the Middle
East." The dichotomy between right and wrong is, according to
Netanyahu, the same as between Israel and the Arabs.
http://www.pij.org/details.php?id=1408
Is the Arab Spring
Israel's Winter?
The Israeli public does not see
a link between the conflict with the Palestinians —together with the
Arab Spring — and the protest for socioeconomic justice.
by Menachem Klein
The Palestine-Israel Journal
Vol.18 No.1 2012 / Arab Spring
In early August 2011, on the same day
that Hosni Mubarak — once president of Egypt, now convicted for
conspiring to kill protesters during the demonstrations that led to
his ouster — was lying on a hospital bed in a Cairo court cage,
Israeli Labor Member of Knesset Benjamin Ben-Eliezer revealed an
amazing secret. He told the media that he and Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu had offered Mubarak political asylum. The offer
came shortly after Feb. 10, 2011, the day when Mubarak transferred
his authorities and left Cairo to go to his Sharm al-Sheikh palace.
Sharm al-Sheikh is not far from Eilat, the city where Israel offered
him asylum.i
Had Mubarak accepted this offer, Israel
would clearly have put itself in the position of being the Arab
people's enemy, perhaps not far behind Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian
president, and Muammar Gaddafi of Libya. Mubarak's rejection rescued
Israel from a very unpleasant situation, yet the proposal shows that
Israel prefers the old order. Whereas many people around the world
see mostly hope for this region, Israel sees risks. The Arab Spring
is Israel's winter. No one has expressed this idea more eloquently
than the skillful orator (in American English) Netanyahu.
The Arab Spring as a Threat
In his speech to the joint session of
the U.S. Congress on May 24, 2011, Netanyahu described the Middle
East as "unstable", "a region of shifting alliances" in which "an
epic battle is now unfolding…between tyranny and freedom." He spoke
about the Arab Spring positively, as if he stood shoulder to
shoulder in solidarity with the Egyptian demonstrators. "Now this
historic moment holds the promise of a new dawn of freedom and
opportunity. Millions of young people are determined to change their
future. We all look at them. They muster courage. They risk their
lives. They demand dignity. They desire liberty."ii
But here comes the twist that exposes
where Israel really stands vis-ŕvis the Arab Spring. What seems so
bright and promising can be a mirage, argued Netanyahu. "These
extraordinary scenes in Tunis and Cairo evoke those of Berlin and
Prague in 1989. Yet as we share their hopes, we must also remember
that those hopes could be snuffed out as they were in Tehran in
1979. The brief democratic spring in Iran was cut short by ferocious
and unforgiving tyranny. This same tyranny smothered Lebanon's
democratic Cedar Revolution and inflicted on that long-suffering
country the medieval rule of Hizbullah." Given his conservative
anti-Arab worldview, Netanyahu does not compare the Arab Spring with
the fall of the Berlin Wall or the Velvet Revolution in Prague. In
his mind, the Arab road will not lead westward, to Berlin and
Prague, but eastward, to the Teheran of 1979. The mass demonstration
phenomena should not mislead us, he says. The Arabs are not
Westerners. What we see is not what we will get at the end of the
day. The nice face demanding democracy can be the mask of the
Iranian- Hizbullah demon uses to take over Egypt. And if we are not
careful enough its local arm, Hamas, will also take over the West
Bank after having gained control of Gaza.
It seems clear that Israel welcomes the
Arab Spring with a very cold shoulder. Israel has traditionally
preferred to maintain close relations with non-democratic monarchs
and dictators, rather than communicating with the people. Israel's
security, according to this view, is assured first by its own force,
and second by strong Arab leaders who agree to cooperate secretly or
openly with Israel.
"Them" and "Us": Israel's Perception of
the Arab "Other"
Netanyahu's deep suspicions about the
authenticity of the Arab masses' awakening are accompanied by a
sharp division between "us" (Israel) and "them" (the Arab masses).
According to Netanyahu, Israel has always embraced democracy, but
the Arabs have not yet. "Israel stands out. It is different,"
exclusive and without doubt better. "Israel is not what is wrong
about the Middle East. Israel is what is right about the Middle
East." The dichotomy between right and wrong is, according to
Netanyahu, the same as between Israel and the Arabs. "While we hope
and work for the best, we must also recognize that powerful forces
oppose this future. They oppose modernity. They oppose democracy.
They oppose peace." Again, on one side stands Israel; a pillar of
modernity, democracy and peace. And on the other side stand the
Arabs. Indeed, these words recall Orientalismiii, but
with two differences. First, they represent a society that is
located in the East, yet perceives itself as a progressive Western
society. Second, unlike classical colonialism and Orientalism,
Israel does not pretend to educate the Arab East and "Israelize" it.
Netanyahu puts it more elegantly that his minister of defense, Ehud
Barak, who once said that Israel is "a villa in the jungle," but on
substance they are the same.
However, and unsurprisingly, the Israel
Defense Forces chief of staff has asked to expand the military
budget. Recent regional regime changes, he argued, create
instability and growing security threats to Israel." It looks like
the Arab Spring, but it can also be a radical Islamic winter" warned
IDF Major General Eisenberg in early September. Referring to what he
characterized as the possibility of a "radical Islamic winter,"
Eisenberg said: "This increases the likelihood of an all-out, total
war, with the possibility of weapons of mass destruction being
used."iv
On the same day that the Arab Spring
achieved one of its great accomplishments — namely when the Libyan
opposition entered Tripoli and Gaddafi's headquarters — former
Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Arens wrote, "This is not the time to
throw caution to the wind… it is a time to think how we are going to
assure the security of Israel's citizens… it may be the time for
those demanding 'social justice' for 'the middle classes' to fold
their tents."v
Not only is the Arab Spring unrelated
to what seems to be its Israeli counterpart, but Israeli
demonstrators are acting against the state security interest
regarding what the Arab Spring might bring.
TV reports about angry Egyptian
protesters storming the Israeli embassy in Cairo on Sept. 10, and
the threat faced by six Israeli security men who were trapped for
hours inside, recalled for many Israelis nightmare scenarios of a
lynching by an Arab mob. A hurried airlift of the ambassador and
nearly all of his staff members to Israel, achieved after U.S.
President Barack Obama's intervention, showed the average Israeli
citizen that his or her state is a safe haven surrounded by
deep-seated hatred. In short, the Arab Spring pushes Israel into a
self-defensive bunker mentality, which perceives events as
existential threats, rather than as circumstances created partially
by Israel.
Israel's Social Protest and the Arab
Spring
Moreover, the Israeli public denies the
Arab Spring's impact on its own protest. In July-August 2011 waves
of protests for socioeconomic justice flowed through Israeli cities.
It began with young students calling their Facebook friends to live
in tents in the main city boulevards and parks to demonstrate
against the high price of rental housing. The spontaneous protest
movement that began in Tel Aviv, immediately followed by young
Jerusalemites, soon spread all over the country from north to south.
It did not take more than few days to become a mass movement against
the high cost of living in general — from nurseries and education to
basic shopping and senior citizens' pensions. After many years of
public silence, hundreds of thousands of low- and middle-class
citizens demonstrated against Netanyahu's neoliberal policy. They
demanded no less than shifting the neoliberal system to social
democracy. In July and August Saturday nights tens and hundreds of
thousands of people turned out shouting "The people want social
justice."
Interestingly, when the Israel
Democracy Institute asked in February about the chances that the
Israeli public would also go out and demonstrate in the streets,
starting a civil revolt like in Egypt and other Arab countries,
almost 90% of the Jewish public saw the odds as moderately low or
very low, with 78.4% defining their overall personal situation as
fairly good or very good. This positive perspective came together
with the view of 63.6% who assessed the government policy of
improving standards of living as not so successful or not successful
at all. Moreover, 82.7% said that Israel is not so successful or not
successful at all in achieving economic and social equality.vi
The root of the summer 2011 Israeli mass demonstrations lies
in these figures. It happened when the public was ready to close the
gap between statements about a good personal situation and no
motivation to demonstrate, and the hard reality of the high cost of
living.
Objective observers connected these
mass demonstrations with the Arab Spring, and one can rightly argue
that Israeli demonstrations followed those in Egypt, Syria, Yemen
and Libya. They look very similar despite minor local differences,
and they all demand comprehensive change rather than reforming the
system. The young generation initiated protest movements through new
media, and they succeeded in mobilizing a broad range of age and
social groups around a very general goal, thus bypassing their
different agendas. In all countries it is an ongoing phenomenon, and
although the protesters succeeded in achieving unimagined gains, no
one can conclude how the spring will end in each of the countries.
conclude how the spring will end in
each of the countries. What looks quite obvious to observers is
denied by the majority in Israel. Israelis distance themselves from
the Arab Spring. A July 2011 public opinion poll by the Israel
Democracy Institute shows that 78% of the Jewish public affirms that
this protest is an authentic Israeli protest, with only 13% seeing
an influence of the Arab Spring. Most probably, this 13% is made up
of Arab Israelis (Israeli citizens of Palestinian origin).vii
From an Ethnic Conflict to a Border
Struggle and Back
There is no doubt that Israel perceives
itself as belonging to the West and not to the Arab East. Even Jews
with Arab origins, who speak Arabic as their first or second
language, call themselves Oriental or Mediterranean Jews, and not
Arab Jews. Obviously Arab-Israeli wars, and more than l00 years of
animosity, created this chasm. In addition, the Zionist movement was
founded in Europe and got much help from Great Britain. When Britain
lost its superpower status, the United States became Israel's chief
protector. And finally, about 1.5 million immigrants from former
Soviet states, who comprise almost 20% of Israeli citizens, strongly
reject any identification with the East.
It should be stressed that the Israeli
self-divide from the Arab world is created by social and historical,
rather than substantial or existential, circumstances I wish to
suggest a more nuanced perspective. This began to change, but then
shifted backviii. The peace with Egypt in 1979, following
President Anwar Sadat's journey to Jerusalem in November 1977, stood
for 14 years as an exception, an agreement made between two states
isolated from their neighboring societies. The Oslo Accords of 1993
opened the way for Jordan to sign its peace with Israel a year
later, and reformulated the central role of Israeli-Palestinian
relations in the region.
The Oslo agreement set in motion a transformation of the Israeli- Palestinian
conflict from an ethnic conflict into a border struggle.ix
Although it changed the pattern of the conflict in a limited
way, the agreement had the potential to evolve into a comprehensive
change. It was moving slowly toward the establishment of a
Palestinian state in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip. This promised to turn the dispute into a border
conflict rather than an existential struggle between two forces,
each of which denied the other's right to the land between the
Jordan and the Mediterranean.
However, the number of Israeli
operations since 1993, and in particular, after the outbreak of the
second intifada in 2000, created a qualitative change. Israel
continued to build and increased settlements construction speedily
and extensively even after the Oslo Accords were signed, thus
creating a paradox. The aim of the settlements was to impose a
border to Israel's liking on the emerging Palestinian state. By the
time the Camp David negotiations of 2000 failed and the second
intifada broke out, the ground had already been laid for Israeli
rule over the entire land between the Jordan and the Mediterranean.
In 2001-2 Israel re-occupied the Palestinian territories and
de-facto destroyed its autonomy. Israel, with American consent, then
confined a powerless Arafat to his Ramallah compound, and turned his
successor, Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas, into
a subcontractor.
Israeli settlement expansion, its
security operations since 2000 and the failure of any third party to
intervene, have returned the conflict to its ethnic origins.
To a great extent, this shift of the
conflict was facilitated by regime changes in Israel, the U.S., and
the PA. In Israel, right and center-right coalitions led by Prime
Ministers Ariel Sharon, Ehud Olmert and Netanyahu replaced the left
and center-left governments of Ehud Barak, Shimon Peres and Yitzhak
Rabin. And in the PA, Abbas replaced Arafat, while in the
Legislative Council Hamas won 2006 elections and achieved a
majority. In the U.S. President Bill Clinton's Democratic
administration was replaced by the neo-conservative administration
of G.W. Bush, and that was followed by the liberal administration of
President Barack Obama. Unfortunately, President Obama did not
translate his outstanding Cairo speech to a coherent policy. He
distanced himself from mediating between
Israel and the Palestinians, and as it
stands in December 2011 he also does not function as caretaker or
facilitator.
Israel enjoys superiority in this
ethnic conflict and uses different security measures in order to
manage the conflict and keep the Palestinians weak and divided. The
Israeli regime is based on maintaining the superiority of the Jewish
ethnic group through security measures taken against the
Palestinians. For Israel security is much more than a mere
technique. It is a civil religion which some would define as an
obsession. The 2011 Summer Protest's call to change national
priorities and budget allocations challenges this state of affairs.
The demonstrators ask implicitly to cut security expenses
dramatically and move funds to social affairs and education.
Meanwhile, settlement expansion with
higher financial investments involves more individuals, families,
communities, state agencies, political activists and civil society
members in the project. The cost of turning the wheel back to
withdraw to the 1967 borders is rising. Under certain circumstances,
the evacuation of most settlements, ending the unilateral annexation
of East Jerusalem and finding a compromise to the 1948 refugees
issue may lead to a civil war and with divided army units. Moreover,
greater investment in settling beyond the 1967 line is accompanied
by religious radicalism. This is not good news for a future
agreement or for the current state of the conflict.
For many in Israel and Palestine the
conflict is an ethno-religious one: a clash between Jewish and
Islamic civilizations. The ethnic foundation of Judaism is
increasingly used to justify the system of Israeli control. Growing
numbers of Jews interpret the concept of a Jewish state in
exclusively ethnic terms, rejecting any obligation to respect
minority rights.
Almost No Hope for Spring or Peace
Joint public opinion polls in June 2011
by Prof. Jacob Shamir of the Harry S. Truman Institute for the
Advancement of Peace at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, and by
Dr. Khalil Shikaki from the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey
Research in Ramallah, found that majorities on both sides regard the
chances for the establishment of an independent Palestinian state
next to the state of Israel in the next five years as nonexistent or
low: 53% on the Israeli side and 62% on the Palestinian side.
Twenty-nine percent and 30%, respectively, regard these chances as
medium, and only 14% of Israelis and 6% of Palestinians regard these
chances as high. Moreover, and perhaps more depressing, is the
following finding: The level of threat on both sides regarding the
aspirations of the other side in the long run is very high. Sixty
percent of Palestinians think that Israel's goals are to extend its
borders to cover all the area between the Jordan River and the
Mediterranean Sea and expel its Arab citizens, and 21% think the
goals are to annex the West Bank while denying political rights to
the Palestinians. Thirty-seven percent of Israelis believe that the
Palestinians' aspirations in the long run are to conquer the State
of Israel and destroy much of the Jewish population in Israel; 18%
think the goal of the Palestinians is to conquer the State of
Israel. Only 17% of Palestinians think Israel's aspirations in the
long run are to withdraw from part or all of the territories
occupied in 1967; and 38% of Israelis think the aspirations of the
Palestinians are to regain some or all of the territories conquered
in 1967.x
Thus, Israelis and Palestinians find
themselves trapped between what is unachievable today—the two-state
solution — and what can never be achieved — a unitary non-ethnic
democracy based on the principle of one man one-vote. At present a
single undemocratic regime that includes Israel proper and the
Palestinian territories constructs this problematic reality.xi
Most Israelis conside r a resolution of
the conflict as irrelevant to their daily life and immediate future.
It is off their agenda. The distance they feel from peace with the
Palestinians goes hand in hand with building psychological barriers
with the Arab Spring, ethno-centrism and the construction of a
physical wall in the occupied West Bank to separate "us" and "them".
The combined result is that Israeli demonstrators put at the
forefront only socioeconomic demands with no relation to peace with
Palestinians. Tactically they are afraid, first, that their rank and
file will split along well-established left/dove-right/hawk lines
and their protest will lose momentum and fade away. Second, they do
not want to provide the government with spin meant to tag their
protest as "extreme dovish/left," which in Israeli political
discourse means cooperating with the enemy, and unworthy of being
considered seriously. However, I argue that beyond these tactical
considerations lies the strategic shift in the Israeli approach. The
Israeli public makes a division between the conflict with the
Palestinians and the socioeconomic protest. Whereas the former is
unsolvable at least in the near future, the latter calls for
immediate radical transformation. According to its current approach,
the Israeli public sees the two fields as hardly linked. Moreover,
the Israeli public categorizes the Arab Spring in the same rubric
where it puts the Palestinians. Both are seen through an
ethno-security lens as almost a lost cause.
This article is based on a paper
presented at a conference devoted to "Transformation of the Arab
World – Where is it heading to?" at the University of Zurich in
October 2011.
Endnotes
i
Haaretz, Aug. 3, 2011:
http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/mk-beneliezer-
israel-offered-political-asylum-to-mubarak-1.376721.
ii
http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Government/Speeches+by+Israeli+leaders/2011/Speech_
PM_Netanyahu_US_Congress_24-May-2011.htm.
iii
See Said, Edward W. (1978)
Orientalism.
London: Pantheon Books.
iv
Ynet, Sept. 5, 2011: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4118220,00.html
v
Haaretz, Aug., 23, 2011: http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/israel-mustadjust-
to-a-changing-middle-east-1.380154
vi
http://www.peaceindex.org/indexMonthEng.aspx?num=202.
vii
http://www.peaceindex.org/indexMonthEng.aspx?num=207#anchor234.
ix
For further analysis see my book
The Shift – Israel Palestine from Border
Struggle to Ethnic Conflict
(London C. Hurst and New York: Columbia
University Press 2010).
x
http://www.pcpsr.org/survey/polls/2011/p40ejoint.html.
xi
Full analysis of this
regime can be found in my book, The Shift, ibid.
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