Tag Archive | "J Street"

Pick of the Week: Israel’s right­-wing wants to maintain the occupation status­ quo

Israel’s right­wing wants to maintain the occupation status­ quo – David Landau

Available at: Haaretz website


At a recent debate with J­Street’s Ben ­Ami, rightist intellectual William Kristol helped answer a question the right has been avoiding: What do you intend to happen if you do not end the occupation?

 

A civilized, serious debate about Israel held on New York’s Upper West Side this week understandably aroused correspondent Chemi Shalev’s wistful jealousy. Pro­peace activist Jeremy Ben ­Ami, the founder of J­Street, and rightist intellectual William Kristol, founder of The Weekly Standard, crossed oratorical swords over the painful issues of peace and occupation, and, while most of the audience seemed to side with Ben­ Ami, both men were heard and treated with dignity, and treated each other with dignity, too.

 

“As an Israeli observer,” Shalev wrote, “I must admit I found myself envious of the ability of the two debaters and of their audience to conduct such a potentially volatile political debate in an atmosphere of mutual respect. In Israel, I suspect, such civilized debates may no longer be possible.”

 

Shalev attributed the respectful atmosphere, in part at least, to the relatively moderate tone and tenor of Kristol’s remarks. He was not vulgar or offensive in reference to President Obama. And he proclaimed his support, in principle, for the two­state solution. Indeed, both debaters strove to eschew emotive extremism in their presentations.

 

But I believe that Kristol also earned the respect – perhaps subconsciously – of his audience in New York, and certainly deserves the gratitude of the wider pro-­Israel community around the world, because of his honesty and intellectual rigor.

 

One statement of Kristol’s, reported by Shalev, leaves us all in his debt. He had the integrity to say that which his ‘camp’ – the ruling coalition in Israel and its supporters abroad – assiduously conceal behind a smokescreen of insincerity.

Israel has ruled the occupied territories for over 45 years, Kristol observed, and the indefinite maintenance of the current status quo “is also an 
option.”

In this brief aside, almost an obiter dictum, Kristol helped answer – with gob­smacking honesty – the question that leaders and spokesmen for 
the Israeli right have spent decades dodging and ducking.
The question is simply: What do you intend to happen if you do not end the occupation?
For the left – for Jeremy Ben ­Ami in the debate in New York – the answer is starkly clear. The Palestinians will demand one-­man-­one-­vote. Israel will be unable to withstand that demand. Israel will lose its character as the Jewish sovereign state and will become, in effect, a bi­national state. The ‘one­state solution.’

For the right, the question is invariably an occasion for obfuscating blather. For the religious right, that blather includes vague but menacing 
invocations of Divine providence and/or intervention.

But Kristol is not one to dissemble or blather. His answer is chillingly straightforward:We can withstand a Palestinian demand for one-­man-­one-­
vote. The indefinite maintenance of the current status quo “is also an option.”

At once, with breathtaking simplicity, our national debate is framed in truthful terms. At its core it is about one’s assessment of the feasibility of 
this ‘indefinite maintenance’ option. The left assesses it unfeasible – and says so. The right assesses it is feasible – and obfuscates.
What Kristol said is what Bibi believes. But Bibi would never say it, would never admit to believing it, because it is so politically incorrect. Kristol is under no such deceitful inhibitions.

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Eye on Palestine: 20/3/2011

Israel and Palestine

  • Last week, an Israeli settler family was brutally killed in the illegal West Bank settlement of Itamar. In response, Netanyahu vowed to build hundreds more illegal homes for settlers, a twisted logic of ‘punishment’ criticised by a Haaretz editorial. Melanie Phillips, meanwhile, saw fit to generalise about Arabs as ‘savages’ and bizarrely concluded that illegal settlements are built ‘on land to which [Israel] is legally and morally entitled’. Her comments are now being investigated by the Press Complaints Commission.
  • Potential Presidential Candidate Sarah Palin is visiting Israel and Occupied East Jerusalem, and will meet with PM Netanyahu and Likud MK Danny Danon on Monday. Palin is renowned for her foreign policy expertise regarding US relationships with North Korea and Russia, and has previously said that: “I believe that the Jewish settlements should be allowed to be expanded upon, because that population of Israel is, is going to grow. More and more Jewish people will be flocking to Israel in the days and weeks and months ahead. And I don’t think that the Obama administration has any right to tell Israel that the Jewish settlements cannot expand.”
  • A cargo ship bound for Egypt allegedly carrying arms for militant groups in the Gaza Strip has been seized by Israeli commandos.
  • Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas says he is ready to travel to Gaza to try and end the division between his Fatah party and the Islamist movement Hamas.
  • A Knesset committee has been scheduled to debate on whether the ‘pro-Israel, pro-peace’ US lobbying group J Street is sufficiently ‘committed’ to Israel to be called a pro-Israel organization.

 

Perspectives on the Conflict

  • The Council for Arab British Understanding has produced a report, ‘Under Occupation: A Report on the West Bank’, based on the findings of its APPG (all party parliamentary group) delegation to the region. Its main findings are:
    - The mass arrest and ill treatment of children has to end
    - The construction of settlements and the barrier outside of the green line must stop immediately
    - Israel’s policies towards Jerusalem should be reversed
    - Vulnerable communities in Area C require greater international protection
    - The European Union should take a more active and assertive role
    - A proper framework for negotiations needs to be developed
    - Palestinian municipal, presidential and legislative elections should be held
    - Human rights and political opposition have to be respected across the OPT
    You can read the report in full here.
  • ASA adjudication on ‘Travel Palestine’ advert: two of the three charges were not upheld. The third was only upheld as ‘misleading’ because the Israeli state refuses to uphold international law on the status of Jerusalem, and thus Jerusalem cannot be ‘universally’ recognised as of Palestinian heritage, as the advert had implied. Colonisation is indeed a powerful narrative, then, but the result was perhaps not the whitewash the pro-Israeli lobby were hoping for. Full details on the ruling and its reasoning are here.
  • Confused about David Cameron’s varying statements on Israel? As an Economist article says, ‘there could almost be two David Camerons’. The explanation, it argues, ‘might lie in the complex triangular choreography of Anglo-American-Israeli diplomacy’. The article doesn’t completely ‘solve’ the puzzle it sets itself, but is worth reading in full here.
  • According to Middle East Monitor/ICM’s recent poll, Europeans believe Jerusalem should be a neutral, international city, as opposed to being a national capital for either the Israelis or the Palestinians. MEMO’s website has more details of the poll, carried out across six European countries, here.

And finally…

An LDFP member is working for EAAPI in the West Bank; you can see her excellent photoblog here.

 

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