"Waiting for an Israeli De Gaulle"
by Josh Ruebner
Reflecting the prevailing mood of decolonization that was then sweeping the
Third World, French Premier General Charles De Gaulle announced to his
fellow citizens on November 4, 1960 that France’s colonial enterprise in
Algeria was unsustainable. De Gaulle mustered the courage to tell his
people that foreign domination of another people is wrong and that he would
henceforth work to reorient relations between France and Algeria "from
government of Algeria by metropolitan France to an Algerian Algeria. That
means an emancipated Algeria...an Algeria which, if Algerians so wish—and I
believe this to be the case—will have its own government, its own
institutions, its own laws."
If only there emerged an Israeli De Gaulle who would tell Israeli citizens
with unvarnished honesty that its brutal military occupation of Palestine is
immoral and unsustainable, and who would have the perspicacity to work for
an emancipated Palestine, then perhaps the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
would not seem as intractable as it does today.
Former Labor Party Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin had the credentials to be
such an Israeli De Gaulle. His impeccable military background and life-long
dedication to the security of Israel certainly convinced many Israelis to
follow him on the Oslo peace process with the Palestinians. Although
Rabin’s oft-stated opposition to Palestinian statehood reflected a certain
disingenuousness regarding what it would take to create a just and lasting
peace, towards the end of his life, there was evidence that his thinking was
evolving to the point at which he was beginning to understand that Israel’s
colonial infrastructure in Palestine would have to be dismantled and
Palestinians would have to achieve something more than nominal autonomy in
order to put an end to the conflict once and for all.
Perhaps because of this evolution in Rabin’s attitude, a Jewish
fundamentalist assassinated him moments after he declared at a peace rally
in Tel Aviv that "the way of peace is more preferable than the way of war."
In an ironic historical twist, Rabin was murdered 35 years to the day after
De Gaulle pledged to work for an emancipated Algeria. Whether Rabin would
have eventually pledged to work for an emancipated Palestine and would have
led his country out of its disastrous military occupation there must be left
to conjecture.
Ever since the assassination of Rabin, Israelis and the Palestinians have
waited for the emergence of another candidate to be the Israeli De Gaulle
and extract Israel from its colonial entanglement with Palestine. Perhaps a
viable candidate to play this role has finally emerged in the figure of
Amram Mitzna, who won a three-way race to head Israel’s Labor Party. The
contest, held earlier this week, positions Mitzna at the forefront of the
Labor Party’s slate of candidates for the next Knesset which will be elected
in January 2003. If Labor receives the most votes in the election, Mitzna
stands to become Israel’s next prime minister.
Mitzna, a former Israel Defense Forces (IDF) general who played a prominent
role in Israel’s crackdown against the Palestinians during their first
uprising against Israeli occupation in the late 1980s, certainly has the
credentials to speak authoritatively to the Israeli public about its
security needs. However, Mitzna is not solely a military man; although yet
to hold a national political position, he has already demonstrated an
aptitude for governance, winning high praises from many as mayor of Haifa,
an ethnically-mixed city of Jewish and Arab Israeli citizens.
According to recent Israeli public opinion polls, Amram Mitzna and the Labor
Party face an uphill battle in their attempt to out-poll the Likud Party and
its leader—likely to be either current Prime Minister Ariel Sharon or former
Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu—and earn the right to form the next
government. What is clear is that to overcome their deficit in the polls,
Mitzna and Labor will have to offer the Israeli electorate an alternative to
the Likud’s repressive, iron-fisted, (in)security-based policy toward the
Palestinians. Any attempt by Labor to replicate the Likud’s "security"
platform will be rejected by the Israeli populace which in recent years has
come to view the Labor Party as being soft on security issues. If the
campaign revolves solely around the question of which party can crackdown
harder on the Palestinians, Israelis would likely view Mitzna as a "Mini Me"
relative to Likud’s Dr. Evil: Sharon or Netanyahu.
Instead, to stand a chance in the upcoming general election, Mitzna and
Labor must distinguish themselves as much as possible from the failed Likud
policy of settlement expansion and military re-occupation of the West Bank.
Indeed, Mitzna appears to be taking this road and articulating policy
positions which have the possibility of putting an end to the tragic
Israeli-Palestinian conflict: unilaterally dismantling illegal Israeli
settlements in Gaza and ending Israel’s military occupation there; returning
to the negotiating table with the Palestinians based on the substantial
progress that was made between them at Taba, Egypt in January 2001; and, if
negotiations do not succeed, unilaterally dismantling outlying settlements
in the West Bank and marking Israel’s border with an independent Palestinian
state.
Although currently down in the polls, due to the unpredictability of the
Israeli political system, no one should yet rule out the possibility that
Mitzna and the Labor Party will be able to engineer a victory. (In 1996,
Netanyahu dug his way out of a 25% hole to eke out a victory against
incumbent Prime Minister Shimon Peres.) And, if this happens, perhaps
Israel’s De Gaulle will finally have arrived.
Josh Ruebner is co-founder of Jews for Peace in Palestine and Israel
(JPPI) and is a former Analyst of Middle East Affairs for Congressional
Research Service (CRS).