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WSWS : News
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East
Protest by Israeli reservists opens new chapter in the struggle
against Zionism
By Chris Marsden
9 February 2002
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Close to 200 Israeli military reservists are now refusing to
serve in the Occupied Territories on the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
In a few short weeks, a movement that started with just two officers,
David Sonnschein and Yaniv Itzkovitz, posting a note at Tel Aviv
University offering support for those unwilling to serve in the
Occupied Territories has become a rallying point for hitherto
inarticulate opposition to the Sharon government.
The reservists, mainly officers and combat veterans, have decried
Prime Minister Ariel Sharons offensive against the Palestinian
Authority as having nothing to do with the security of our
country. Its sole purpose, they insist, is to perpetuate
our control over the Palestinian people at a price
of the corruption of the entire Israeli society. Some
of those who have been dubbed refuseniks have given
harrowing accounts of the violent repression of the Palestinians,
including shooting at women and children and forcing unarmed people
to pick up objects that might be bombs. We were raised to
be officers with values, and theyve turned us into combatants
who deal in bloodshed and war crimes, said Lt. David Sonnschein,
a 28-year-old software engineer and one of the founders of the
movement.
The courageous stand taken by the reservists has been met with
vitriolic condemnation and threats of reprisals from the government,
the military and the far-right parties. All the original 50 signatories,
including Sonnschein and Itzkovitz, have been relieved of their
command positions and could face jail sentences. Army Chief Lt.
General Shaul Mofaz has warned that if the protesters were ideologically
motivated by a political view that Jewish settlements should
be abandoned and the occupied territories handed to the Palestinians,
then this is not only refusal but grave sedition. In my
eyes, its more than refusal to serve, its incitement
to rebellion, he said. There is no more serious act
than that.
Despite this level of political intimidation, support for the
protest keeps growing. A poll conducted for Israel radio found
that 31 percent of Israelis supported the protesting officers.
Other protests have also gravitated to the reservists stance.
The Association for Civil Rights in Israel announced that it would
give free legal aid to any soldier who refused to carry out a
morally illegal order. Yesh Gvul (There is a limit!), a group
that counsels individual soldiers on refusing to serve in the
West Bank and Gaza, said that more than 400 Israelis have refused
to serve in the occupied territories since the current intifada
erupted. Ever since the reservists protest it has been inundated
with calls from reservists, their wives and mothers asking for
advice.
Spokesman Ishai Menuvhin said that in his view, the reaction
of the army shows that it is in panic.
The reservists are not the first to have raised a voice in
protest, but it is they who have succeeded in sparking the first
major public debate on Israeli war crimes since the present intifada
began 16 months ago. This has been helped by the fact that they
are serving officers, who have acted out of conscience after having
been told to commit atrocities. This has lent enormous moral authority
to what they say. But the major reason for the impact of the officers
protest is that, unlike during the first intifada a decade
ago, organised opposition to the military repression of the Palestinians
has been virtually nonexistent.
The stand taken by the reservists has revealed the real state
of political and social relations in Israelthe true extent
of opposition to Sharons war on the Palestinian peoplein
contrast to the opinion polls supposedly proving overwhelming
support for the governments actions. It proves that the
wholesale capitulation of the official liberal left to Sharon
was not, as they claimed, because of an overwhelming popular belief
that the survival of Israel was imperilled. Rather than the millions
of Israeli workers, students, youth and intellectuals who once
supported efforts to secure a negotiated settlement with the Palestinians
having been won to the bloodthirsty agenda of Likud, their views
have been denied expression due to the virtual collapse of the
Israeli peace movement. Crucial to this has been the decision
of the Labour Party to join Sharons coalition.
The reservist have thus performed an invaluable political service
in exposing the rank cowardice and political treachery of the
Labour Party, and of Foreign Minister Shimon Peres in particularwho
has acted as the chief apologist for Sharons war-crimes
on the domestic and international arena. In doing so, the officers
protest has raised fundamental questions of political strategy
and orientation for the Israeli, Arab and international working
class.
The refuseniks have insisted on their loyalty to the state
of Israel and commitment to Zionism. They limit themselves to
a call for a return to the pre-1967 Israeli borders and a peaceful
coexistence of two states, Jewish and Palestinian. However, this
cannot provide a viable basis for opposing Sharons brutal
treatment of the Palestinians and the drive to consolidate Israeli
control of the Occupied Territories.
It is impossible to reconcile loyalty to Zionism and the Israeli
state with a consistent defence of democratic ideals. The 1967
War and subsequent occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip
were a turning point in Israels emergence as an aggressive
and expansionist regional power. Its military/political dictatorship
over the Palestinians has placed Jewish workers permanently at
odds with their Arab brothers and sisters and provided the far
right with a vital social base amongst the settler population.
But the expansionist turn by Israel flowed from the very nature
of the Zionist project, based as it was on the premise that creating
a religious-based state would provide the only basis for the free
cultural and social development of the Jewish people. Israels
founders fulfilled their aims through the forcible expulsion of
the British protectorate of Palestines Arab inhabitants.
They created a state in which anti-Arab discrimination was built
into its very foundations and all aspects of social and political
life were scarred and deformed.
Whatever the political and ideological confusion evinced by
the reservists, their actions objectively challenge the very foundations
of Zionismbuilt as it is on the assertion of the primacy
of a Jewish identity over all other political and social considerations.
That such a powerful expression of democratic and progressive
sentiment has arisen within the army of occupation itselfand
that this finds widespread support amongst Jewish workersalso
serves as an indictment of every variety of Arab nationalism.
Whether it is the secular stance of Yassir Arafats Fatah
or the Islamic fundamentalists of Hamas, no Palestinian group
is capable of making a genuine political appeal for unity between
the Jewish and Arab working class. As bourgeois nationalist movements,
their aim is to secure the right of the Palestinian elite to share
in the exploitation of the Arab workers and peasants. This places
an absolute limit on their conflict with the Israeli bourgeoisie,
in that nothing must be done that throws into question the survival
of the capitalist order in the Middle East.
Whether or not the various Palestinian groups accept the right
of Israel to exist, they all defend the existence of the Arab
bourgeois regimes and view the appearance of a class-based movement
that cuts across national, ethnic and religious divisions as an
anathema. This organic hostility to the unity of Jewish and Arab
workers finds its most degenerate expression in terrorist bombings
targeting Israels civilian population, which their authors
seek to justify by asserting that all Jews share the guilt of
the Israeli state for the oppression of the Palestinians.
By opposing the brutalisation of the Palestinian masses and
appealing for mutual tolerance and respect, the officers
protest offers a pledge for the future. It indicates that the
conditions are emerging for a reorientation of the Israeli working
class on a new and opposed perspective to Zionist nationalism,
one that sets out to unite the Arab and Jewish working class on
the basis of socialist internationalism. It opens up a new and
exciting chapter in the struggle of the peoples of the Middle
East for their social and political emancipation.
See Also:
Israeli army reservists refuse
to serve in occupied territories
[31 January 2002]
Israels war
measures and the legacy of Zionism
[16 October 2000]
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