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WSWS : News
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Israeli elections highlight disaster facing Middle East
By Ann Talbot
28 January 2003
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Israelis going to the polls today find the official political
life of their country has reached an unprecedented impasse as
the Middle East faces a war that will destabilise the entire region.
Israels economy has deteriorated to the point that the
country is about to be declared uncreditworthy. Yet, rather than
addressing this crisis and its terrible impact on the social conditions
of the Israeli population, the government is prosecuting a ferocious
war against the Palestinian people.
All the polls show that Ariel Sharons government has
little popular support for his brutal policy in the West Bank
and Gaza, and that many Israelis favour withdrawal from the occupied
territories. But his Likud Party is likely to win the biggest
share of seats in the Knesset because there is no viable political
alternative among the parties standing in the elections.
Sharon has completely revoked the Oslo peace process begun
in 1993 and has all but destroyed the Palestinian Authority. His
government has instituted Israeli army control over every town
in the West Bank, assassinated Palestinian leaders and their families,
incarcerated thousands of Palestinian youths without trial, and
stepped up financial support for Zionist settlers in the Palestinian
territories. Above all, he has tied Israeli politics to those
of the Bush administration in the US and its drive to dominate
the oil resources of the Middle East.
Last weekend the government ordered the deepest Israeli invasion
of Gaza City in two years, killing 12 people and wounding at least
67. Israeli tanks and helicopter gunships destroyed Palestinian
homes and shops. Among the dead was a seven-year-old boy shot
while playing near an army outpost. Both the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip have been sealed for the duration of the election whilst
Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz has refused to rule out the total
reoccupation of Gaza.
Sharon no doubt hopes that by escalating the violence he can
frighten the electorate into voting for him. The likelihood of
further suicide bombing reprisals from increasingly desperate
Palestinian youth will be used to justify yet more repression.
This is Sharons cynical modus operandi.
The lack of any mass support for the established political
parties has enabled organised crime to take a direct role in politics.
The Haaretz newspaper revealed that Sharon received
illegal campaign contributions of $1.5 million from South African
businessman and family friend Cyril Kern and that gangster elements
bought places on the Likud electoral list. Rather than investigate
these serious charges, Sharon had the state prosecutor who leaked
the information, Liora Glatt-Berkowitz, suspended from her job.
She now faces prosecution and a possible three-year jail sentence.
The Labour Party
The Labour Party has been unable to make any political headway
despite these revelations. After a brief attempt to revive its
electoral fortunes under its new leader Amram Mitznah, Labours
support is collapsing. Polls suggest that it may only get 19 seats
in the Knesset. The party may split after the election as some
Labour MKs join a coalition government under Sharon and others
refuse.
Mitznah presents himself as a moderate alternative to Sharon.
He claims that a Labour government would restart peace talks with
the Palestinians and put an end to the conflict. In reality Labour
never offered a political perspective that was fundamentally distinct
from that of Likud. But the Labour campaigns rapid disintegration
has removed even the appearance of an alternative to Likud within
the official political spectrum. The turnout at the polls is expected
to fall to an unprecedented low, expressing widespread alienation
from the political process.
Insofar as Mitznah has a different approach to the Palestinian
question it is because he represents a wealthy layer that sees
the prospect of making money out of business deals with Israels
Arab neighbours. His much-publicised good relations
with Arabs in Haifa, where he is mayor, extend only to the richest
sections of society. While Mayor Mitznah drinks tea with the Arab
elite, poor Arabs have their houses bulldozed.
Arab and Israeli businessmen share a common interest in creating
a Palestinian state that can be used as a source of cheap labour
for manufacturing and agriculture. The protracted occupation of
the West Bank and Gaza Strip has halted any such economic development
and has seriously affected the economy of Israel as well.
There is nothing inherently progressive about Mitznahs
call for an Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories.
As a general in the Israeli army, he was as willing as any leading
military commander to unleash brutal repression against the Palestinians.
Noam Chomsky describes in his book Fateful Triangle how,
when Mitznah was in command of the West Bank during the first
intifada, the army destroyed 3,000 Palestinian homes on
the pretext that family members were suspected of throwing stones
or similar offences. Between December 1987 and March 1989 Israeli
forces under Mitznahs command killed 302 Palestinians and
wounded another 3, 252.
Mitznah support for a return to the so-called peace process,
elaborated at Oslo in 1993 and at Camp David in 2000, is aimed
at the creation of a colonial-style bantustan arrangement in the
West Bank and Gaza. When the Labour prime minister Ehud Barak
put forward these proposals at Camp David, even Palestinian Authority
leader Yasser Arafat, who had agreed to every previous demand
placed upon him, did not dare accept it because it would so obviously
subordinate the Palestinian state to Israeli authority.
Baraks proposals were a continuation of those put forward
by his Likud predecessors. Like them, he allowed illegal settlements
to continue. Barak sanctioned Sharons provocative visit
to the Temple Mount in September 2000 and gave the order to shoot
Palestinian protesters.
The bitter experience with Baraks government, which was
elected on a wave of feeling that the war against the Palestinians
must end, has contributed in no small degree to the deep disillusionment
with politics that is evident in the current election.
When they lost power, Labour joined Sharons national
unity government, which used Shimon Peress international
reputation as a supporter of Oslo to legitimise the repression
of the Palestinians. The other Labour member of Sharons
cabinet, Ben Eliezer, was even more right-wing than many Likud
members.
It is not only Labours perspective that has been exposed
as bankrupt. Peace Now, Meretz and the extra-parliamentary war
movement as a whole share the same basic outlook that peace and
democracy are compatible with maintaining the Israeli state.
However, Likuds rise to power reflects the objective
character of the Zionist project, which can only be maintained
by the use of military force and terror. Its political trajectory,
with its ever more open support for ethnic cleansing, growing
corruption and the destruction of all democratic forms, is an
expression of an inexorable historical logic that was set in motion
by the violent foundation of the Israeli state.
The role of the US
The present US administration has played a crucial role in
this process. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has been the most
outspoken in expressing Americas intention to redraw the
political map of the Middle East under US hegemony. But even the
so-called doves in the administration have issued only the mildest
criticism of Israel for its continuous atrocities in the occupied
territories.
Official US aid to Israel for the current year is $2.7 billion,
of which $2.1 billion is for military assistance. However, Israel
is now requesting an emergency bailout consisting of an extra
$8 billion in loan guarantees and $4 billion in special military
grants. We recognise the economic impact on Israel of the
ongoing war against terrorism and regional stability, and are
considering how the United States can contribute to continuing
to assure its bright future, said Sean McCormack, a White
House spokesman.
A number of commentators have pointed to the close connections
between the Bush administration and Likud. Undersecretary of Defense
Policy Douglas Feith and Chair of the Defense Policy Board, Richard
Perle, wrote an advisory paper in 1996 calling on the newly elected
Likud government to make a clean break with the Oslo
peace process and reoccupy the West Bank and Gaza. Members of
the right-wing Jewish Institute for National Security (JINSA)
and the Center for Security Policy (CSP) are actively pushing
Likuds policies on Pentagon and State Department committees,
including Perles Defence Policy Board.
US officials have attempted to exert some restraint over Israels
assault on the occupied territories for tactical reasons. Washington
needs to maintain support among Middle Eastern states for its
war against Iraq. The most right-wing elements around Bush, however,
are prepared to use Israel to blow apart the region with little
regard for the catastrophic outcome for Jews or Arabs alike.
Israels strategic alliance with Washington is reflected
in its increasingly belligerent attitude towards Europe, which
has traditionally been the countrys main trading partner.
In a recent interview with Newsweek, Sharon was asked about
the recent peace proposals put forward by the Quartet of the United
Nations, the European Union, the US and Russia. He replied dismissively,
The Quartet is nothing! Dont take it seriously.
Britains recent attempts to organise a peace conference
were met with outright obstruction from the Israeli authorities,
who refused to allow representatives of the Palestinian Authority
to travel to London.
The role of bourgeois nationalism
Arab nationalism has also played a crucial role in exposing
the Palestinians and the masses of the entire Middle East to the
attacks of US imperialism and its Zionist allies. During the Cold
War, Arab nationalist regimes were able to lean on the Soviet
Union and project a radical image. But, as subsequent developments
have shown, the Arab bourgeoisie were always willing to seek an
accord with imperialism against the Arab masses.
Egypt recently summoned the Palestinian factions to Cairo in
an attempt to broker a cease-fire, which it hoped would help Mitznah
in the polls and restart peace talks. But both Hamas and Islamic
Jihad pulled out of the conference when they realised they were
being asked to give up all resistance. They feared losing any
support among the Palestinian masses if they did so.
It is a measure of the repression suffered by the Palestinians
that so many young people are willing to carry out suicide bombings
and that such a desperate tactic receives popular support. But
it is also an indictment of the perspective of the nationalist
movement that this is the only form of opposition to Israeli rule
that seems open to Palestinian youth.
Regardless of who wins the elections, there will be no peace
in Israel, much less the Middle East as a whole. Only a united
movement of Arab and Jewish workers in the struggle for the creation
of a United Socialist States of the Middle East holds a progressive
way forward for the Israeli people and the masses of the entire
region.
See Also:
Israel: An attempt
to resuscitate the Labour Party
[9 December 2002]
Israel: social crisis
underlies collapse of Likud-Labour coalition
[5 November 2002]
Israel: Ethnic cleansing
is now official government policy
[3 December 2002]
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