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American Zionism -- The Real Problem
(3)
by Edward
Said
The events of the past four
weeks in Palestine have been a near-total triumph for Zionism in the
United States for the first time since the modern re-emergence of the
Palestinian national movement in the late 1960s. Political as well as
public discourse has so definitively transformed Israel into the victim
during the recent clashes, that even though 140 Palestinian lives were
lost and close to 5,000 casualties have been reported, it is still
something called "Palestinian violence" that has disrupted the
smooth and orderly flow of the "peace process."
There is now a small litany of
phrases that every editorial commentator either repeats verbatim or relies
on as an unspoken assumption: these have been engraved in ears, minds, and
memories as a guide for the perplexed, a manual or machine for turning out
phrases that have clogged the air for at least a month. I can recite most
of them by heart: Barak offered more concessions at Camp David than any
Israeli prime minister before him (90 per cent of the territories and
partial sovereignty over East Jerusalem); Arafat was cowardly and lacked
the necessary courage to accept Israeli offers to end the conflict;
Palestinian violence, directed by Arafat, has threatened Israel (all sorts
of variations on this, including the wish to eliminate Israel,
anti-Semitism, suicidal rage in order to get on television, putting
children in the front lines so that they would become martyrs) and proved
that an ancient "hatred" of the Jews motivates Palestinians;
Arafat is a weak leader who allows his people to attack Jews and incite
against them by releasing terrorists and producing schoolbooks that deny
Israel's existence.
There are probably one or two
more formulae that I have not cited, but the general picture is that
Israel is so surrounded by rock-throwing barbarians that even the
missiles, tanks and helicopter gunships that have been used to
"defend" Israelis from the violence are simply warding off a
terrible force. Bill Clinton's injunctions (dutifully parroted by his
secretary of state) for Palestinians to "pull back" goes a long
way to suggest that it is Palestinians who are encroaching on Israeli
territory, not the other way round.
It is also worth mentioning
that so successful has this Zionisation of the media been that not a
single map has been published or shown on television to remind American
viewers and readers -- notoriously ignorant of both geography and history
-- that Israeli encampments, settlements, roads and barricades crisscross
Palestinian land in Gaza and the West Bank. Moreover, as happened in
Beirut in 1982, there is a veritable Israeli siege of Palestinians,
including of Arafat and his men. Completely forgotten, if it was ever at
all understood, is the system of Areas A, B, and C by which the military
occupation of 40 per cent of Gaza and 60 per cent of the West Bank
continues, and which the Oslo peace process was never really designed to
end, much less totally modify.
As suggested by the absence of
geography in this most geographical of conflicts, the resulting void is a
vitally important point since the pictures that are either shown or
described are without context at all. I think the omission by the Zionised
media was a deliberate one at the outset and has now become automatic. It
has allowed phony commentators like Thomas Friedman to peddle his wares
shamelessly, droning on about American even-handedness, Israeli
flexibility and generosity and his own perspicacious pragmatism with which
he berates Arab leaders and stuns his bored readers. It has the result not
only of permitting the completely preposterous notion of a Palestinian
attack on Israel to prevail, but it also further dehumanises Palestinians
as being beasts without sentience or motive. Thus little wonder that when
the figures of the dead and wounded are recited no nationalities are
given: this lets Americans assume that the suffering is equally divided
between the "warring parties," and in fact elevates Jewish
suffering and reduces or eliminates Arab feelings entirely, except of
course for rage. Rage and its cognates remain as the only and certainly
the defining Palestinian emotion. It explains the violence, and indeed, it
reifies it so that Israel has come to represent a decency and democracy
that is forever surrounded by rage and violence. No other process can
logically explain the stone throwers and the stalwart Israeli "defence."
Nothing is said of house
demolitions, land expropriations, illegal arrests, torture and the like.
Nothing is cited about what is (except for the Japanese occupation of
Korea) the longest military occupation in modern times; nothing about UN
resolutions; nothing about Israeli contraventions of all the Geneva
Conventions; nothing about the sufferings of one entire people and the
obduracy of another. Forgotten are the catastrophe of 1948, ethnic
cleansing and massacres, the devastation of Qibya, Kafr Qassem, Sabra and
Shatila, the long years of military government for non-Jewish Israeli
citizens to say nothing of their continued oppression as a persecuted 20
per cent minority within the Jewish state. Ariel Sharon at best is a
provocation, never a war criminal, Ehud Barak a statesman, never the
assassin of Beirut. Terrorism is always on the Palestinian side of the
ledger, defence on the Israeli.
What Friedman and pro-Israeli
"peaceniks" fail to mention when they extol Barak's
unprecedented generosity is the real substance of it. We are not reminded
that his commitment to a third withdrawal (of about 12 per cent) made at
Wye 18 months ago has never occurred. Of what value then are more such
"concessions?" We are told that he was willing to give back 90
per cent of the territory. What gets left out is that the 90 per cent is
of what Israel has no intention of giving back. Greater Jerusalem is well
over 30 per cent of the West Bank; large settlements to be annexed are
another 15 per cent; military roads of areas have yet to be determined. So
after all this is deducted, 90 per cent of the balance isn't so much after
all.
As for Jerusalem: the Israel
concession was principally in being willing to discuss and maybe, just
maybe, to offer shared authority over the Haram Al-Sharif. The
breathtaking dishonesty of the matter is that all of West Jerusalem
(principally Arab in 1948) was already conceded by Arafat, plus most of a
vastly expanded East Jerusalem. One detail further: Palestinians' firing
by small arms on Gilo is routinely made to seem like gratuitous violence,
whereas no one mentions that Gilo itself sits on land confiscated from
Beit Jala, the place from which the firing emanates. Besides, Beit Jala
was disproportionately shelled by Israeli helicopters using missiles to
destroy civilian houses.
I have made a survey of the
major newspapers. Ever since 28 September, there have been anywhere
between one and three opinion articles per average day in the New York
Times, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times
and the Boston Globe. With the exception of perhaps three articles written
from a pro-Palestinian point of view in the Los Angeles Times, and two
(one by an Israeli lawyer, Alegra Pacheco, the other by a pro-Oslo liberal
Jordanian journalist, Rami Khoury) in the New York Times, all the articles
-- (including those by regular columnists like Friedman, William Safire,
Charles Krauthammer and others like them), have been in support of Israel,
the US-sponsored peace process, and the idea that Palestinian violence,
Arafat's lack of cooperation, and Islamic fundamentalism are to blame. The
writers have been former US military as well as civilian officials,
Israeli apologists and officials, think tank specialists and experts,
officials of pro-Israeli lobbies and organisations. In other words, the
total blanketing of the mainstream has taken place on the assumption that
no Palestinian or Arab or Islamic position on such matters as Israeli
terror tactics against civilians, settler-colonialism, or military
occupation exists at all, or is worth hearing from. This is simply without
precedent in the annals of US journalism, and is a direct reflection of a
Zionist mind-set that makes Israel the norm in human behaviour, thereby
excluding from equal consideration the existence of 300 million Arabs and
1.2 billion Muslims. In the long run this is of course a suicidal position
for Zionists to be in, but such is the arrogance of power that the thought
seems not to have occurred to anyone.
The mind-set I have described
is truly staggering in its recklessness and, were it not very much a
practical as well as actual distortion of reality, one could quite easily
be talking about a form of private mental derangement. But it corresponds
very closely to the official Israeli policy of dealing with Palestinians
not as a people with a history of dispossession for which in large measure
Israel is directly responsible, but as a periodic nuisance for whom force,
and neither understanding nor full accommodation, is the only possible
response. Everything else is literally unthinkable. This astonishing
blindness is compounded in the United States since Arabs and Muslims are
scarcely paid attention to except as (I have said in an earlier article)
the butt of every aspiring politician. A few days ago Hillary Clinton
announced in a gesture of the most revolting hypocrisy that she was
returning a $50,000 donation from an American-Muslim group because, she
said, they supported terrorism; this in fact was an outright lie, since
the group in question had only said that it supported Palestinian
resistance against Israel during the current crisis, not in itself an
untoward position but criminalised in the American system only because a
totalitarian Zionism requires that any -- and I mean literally any --
criticism of what Israel does is simply intolerable and the rankest
anti-Semitism. And this despite the fact that (again literally) the entire
world has criticised Israel's policies of military occupation,
disproportionate violence, and the siege of the Palestinians. In America
you must refrain from any criticism, otherwise you are hounded as an
anti-Semite requiring the severest opprobrium.
The further peculiarity of
American Zionism, which is a system of antithetical thought and Orwellian
distortion, is that it is impermissible to speak of Jewish violence, or
Jewish actions when it comes to Israel, even though everything done by
Israel is done in the name of the Jewish people, for and by a Jewish
state. That such a state is a misnomer, since almost 20 per cent of the
population is not Jewish, is never mentioned and this too accounts for the
amazing, entirely deliberate discrepancy between what the media calls
"Israeli Arabs" and "the Palestinians:" no reader or
viewer could possibly know that they are the same people in fact divided
by Zionist policy, or that both communities represent the result of
Israeli policy -- apartheid in one case, military occupation and ethnic
cleansing in the other.
In fine, American Zionism has
made any serious public discussion of Israel, by far the largest ever
recipient of US foreign aid, its past and its future, a taboo not be
broken in any circumstance. To call this literally the last taboo in
American discourse is by no means an exaggeration. Abortion,
homosexuality, the death penalty, even the sacrosanct military budget have
been talked about with some freedom (although always within limits). The
American flag can be burned in public, whereas the systematic continuity
of Israel's 52-year-old treatment of the Palestinians is virtually
unimaginable, a narrative with no permission to appear.
This consensus might be
somehow tolerable were it not for the fact that it makes the continuing
punishment and dehumanisation of the Palestinian people an actual virtue.
There is simply no people in the world today whose killing on television
screens seems to be considered by most American viewers to be acceptable
as well-deserved punishment. This is the case with Palestinians whose
daily loss of life in the past month is herded under the rubric "the
violence on both sides," as if the stones and slings of young men
thoroughly tired of injustice and repression were a major offence rather
than the courageous resistance to a demeaning fate meted out to them not
just by Israeli soldiers armed by America, but by a peace process designed
to coop them up in Bantustans and reservations fit for animals.
That the US supporters of
Israel could have plotted for seven years to produce a document designed
essentially to cage people like inmates in an asylum or prison -- that is
the real crime. And that this could be passed off as peace instead of the
desolation that it really has been all along, that surpasses my powers to
understand or adequately describe as anything less than untrammelled
immorality. The worst thing of all is that so iron-like is the wall
protecting American discourse about Israel that no questions can be put to
the minds that produced Oslo and that for seven years have been passing
off their scheme to the world as peace. One scarcely knows which is more
pernicious, the mentality that thinks of Palestinians as not entitled even
to express a sense of injustice (they are too low a form for that) or the
one that continues to plot their further enslavement.
Were this the whole it would
be bad enough. But our miserable status as far as US Zionism is concerned
is compounded by the absence of any institution here or in the Arab world
ready and able to produce an alternative. I fear that the coverage of
those stone-throwing protesters in Bethlehem, Gaza, Ramallah, Nablus and
Hebron may not be adequately reflected in the dithering Palestinian
leadership, unable either to retire or to go forward. That is the ultimate
pity of it.
Source:
by the same author:
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