| Jennifer Loewenstein Archive |
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June 5, 2006
Population Transfers, Land Theft and Bankrupt Ghettos
Palestine: It's
All Over
By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
The first item I ever wrote about Palestinians was around
1973, when
I was just starting a press column for a New York weekly
called the
Village Voice. It concerned a story in the New York Times
about a
"retaliatory" raid by the Israeli air force, after a couple
of Al
Fatah guerillas had fired on an IDF unit. I'm not sure
whether there
any fatalities. The planes flew north and dumped high
explosive on a
refugee camp in Lebanon, killing a dozen or so men, women and
children.
I wrote a little commentary, noting the usual lack of moral
disquiet
in the Times' story about this lethal retaliation inflicted
on
innocent refugees. Dan Wolf, the Voice's editor, called me
in and
suggested I might want to reconsider. I think, that first
time, the
item got dropped. But Dan's unwonted act of censorship riled
me and I
started writing a fair amount about the lot of the
Palestinians.
These were the days when Palestinians carried far less news
value for
editors than Furbish's lousewort, and no politician ever
held that
this beleagured plant didn't actually exist as a species,
which is
what Golda Meir, Israel's prime minister said of
Palestinians.
Back then you had to dig a little harder to excavate what
Jewish
Israelis were actually doing to Palestinians. Lay out the
facts about
institutionalized racism, land confiscations, torture and a
hail of
abuse would pour through the mailbox, as when I published a
long
interview in the Voice in 1980 with the late Israel Shahak,
the
intrepid professor from Hebrew University.
It's slightly eerie now to look at what Shahak was saying
back then
and at the accuracy of his analysis and predictions: "The
basic
trends were established in '74 and '75, including settler
organizations, mystical ideology, and the great financial
support of
the United States to Israel. Between summer '74 and summer
'75 the
key decisions were taken, and from that time it's a straight
line."
Among these decisions, said Shahak, was "to keep the occupied
territories of Palestine," a detailed development of much
older
designs consummated in 1967.
Gradually, through the 1980s, very often in the translations
from the
Hebrew language press that Shahak used to send, the contours
of the
Israeli plan emerged, like the keel and ribs and timbers of
an old
ship: a road system that would bypass Palestinian towns and
villages
and link the Jewish settlements and military posts;
ever-expanding
clusters of settlements; a master plan for control of the
whole
region's water.
It wasn't hard to get vivid descriptions of the increasingly
intolerable conditions of life for Palestinians: the torture
of
prisoners, the barriers to the simplest trip, the harassment
of
farmers and school children, the house demolitions. Plenty
of people
came back from Israel and the territories with harrowing
accounts,
though few ever made the journey into a major newspaper or
onto
national tv.
And even in the testimonies that did get published here,
what was
missing was any acknowledgement of the long-term plan to
wipe the
record clean of all troublesome U.N. resolutions, crush
Palestinian
national aspirations, steal their land and water, cram them
into ever
smaller enclaves, ultimately balkanize them with the Wall,
which was
on the drawing board many years ago. Indeed to write about
any sort
of master plan was to incur further torrents of abuse for
one's
supposedly "paranoid" fantasies about Israel' bad faith,
with much
pious invocation of the "peace process".
But successive Israeli governments did have a long-term
plan. No
matter who was in power, the roads got built, the water
stolen, the
olive and fruit trees cut down (a million) the houses
knocked over
(12,000), the settlements imposed (300) the shameless
protestations
of good faith issued to the US press (beyond computation).
As the new millennium shambled forward, surely it became
impossible
to believe any Israeli claim to be bargaining, or even to
wish to
bargain in good faith. By now the "facts of the ground" in
Israel and
the territories were as sharply in focus as one of Dali's
surrealist
paintings.
In May of this year the Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert,
comes to
Washington and addresses a joint session of Congress in
which he
declares: "I believed, and to this day still believe, in our
people's
eternal and historic right to this entire land." In other
words he
doesn't recognize the right of Palestinians to even the
wretched
cantons currently envisaged in his "realignment". Why should
Hamas
believe a syllable of Olmert's poppycock? When Arafat and
the PLO
gave worrisome signs of being eager for an accommodation
Israel's
reply was to invade Lebanon.
In Olmert's "realignment plan the "Separation Barrier," now
scheduled
to be Israel's permanent "demographic border," annexes 10
per cent of
the West Bank, while melding into Israel vast settlements
and half a
million settlers. The Palestinians lose their best
agricultural land
and the water. Israel's greater Jerusalem finishes off all
possible
viability for a viable, separate Palestinian state. This
Palestinian
mini-archipelago of cantons is shuttered to the east by
Israel's
security border in the Jordan Valley.
The press here, timid and ignorant, greets Olmert's
"realignment"
with tranquil respect. In the meantime a frightful
historical tragedy
is in its final chapters. With the connivance of what is
sometimes
laughably referred to as the "world community"--notably the
US and
EU, Israel is deliberately starving Palestinians into
submission as
the reward for having democratically elected the party of
their
choice. Whole communities are on the edge of starvation, cut
off by
Israel from food and medicines. The World Bank predicts a
poverty
rate of over 67 percent later this year. A UN Report issued
in Geneva
on May 30 says that four out of 10 Palestinians in the
territories
live under the official poverty line of less than $2.10 a
day. The
ILO estimates the jobless rate to be 40.7 percent of the
Palestinian
labor force.
The end of the story? I'd say the basic strategy is what it
was in
1948: population transfer, to be achieved by making life so
awful for
Palestinians that most of them will depart, leaving a few
bankrupt
ghettoes behind as memorials to all those foolish hopes of a
sovereign Palestinian state.
Footnote: A shorter version of this column ran in the print
edition
of The Nation that went to press last Wednesday.
Have you asked yourself how is it possible that you, a well informed and educated citizen, can be ignorant of what is being done in your name, with your money? Why have you never read anything by these journalists and commentators in the newspapers and magazines you read? Why have you not heard about this on your radio or TV?
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