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The Israeli state and the ultra-right settler movement
Part one
By Jean Shaoul
15 August 2005
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This is the first in a four-part series.
The campaign by the ultra-nationalist settler movement against
the planned withdrawal from Gaza has again demonstrated the extraordinary
and disproportionate political influence of these extreme right-wing
forces in Israel.
Prime Minister Ariel Sharons plan to disengage
from Gaza and pull out the settlements housing just 8,000 Israelis
is a tactical retreat in the face of the escalating cost of maintaining
the settlements. More fundamentally, it is aimed at securing Washingtons
consent for the annexation of vast swathes of the West Bank that
Israel has occupied illegally for nearly four decades. In Gaza
itself, Israel will remain the occupying power, retaining control
of Gazas borders, its seaport, airport and water supply,
and will reserve the right to invade whenever it sees fit.
Despite this, members of Sharons own cabinet, including
the finance minister and former prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu,
who resigned in protest, as well as the ultra-nationalist and
religious parties, are opposed to the disengagement. Israels
extreme right wing regards Sharons decision to pull out
from any part of the biblical land of Israel as nothing short
of treason.
The settlers have staged sit-down protests, poured oil and
nails onto the roads, and set tyres alight to block roads in Israel,
causing traffic jams for miles. They have beaten, stoned and shot
Palestinians in an effort to humiliate them and provoke them into
violent retaliation. Sharon has blamed such incidents on the banned
Kach movement and ordered a crackdown on the extremists.
Nine soldiers refused to obey orders and prevent Israelis from
entering the Gaza Strip. Two went into hiding in a Gaza settlement,
while a 10th soldier was tried and sentenced to 21 days in prison.
The army disbanded the platoon in an attempt to head off mutiny
by right-wing troops refusing to enforce the pullout.
This month, a 19-year-old conscript soldier, who had refused
to implement the pullout and deserted the army two months ago,
shot and killed 4 Arab Israelis and wounded at least 12 others.
Eden Nathan Zaada boarded a bus, where he opened fire with an
M-16 rifle, shooting the bus driver and passengers before turning
on people on the street. He carried on shooting until he ran out
of bullets. The gunman said, Tell the prime minister this
is to stop the disengagement. I will carry out a massacre here.
Enraged bystanders boarded the bus and beat him to death.
Prior to this incident, there were fears that religious fanatics
would bomb the Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, the third-holiest
site in the Muslim world. Three months ago, Zaada was questioned
by the police, who suspected him of planning to gain entry into
the mosque.
President Moshe Katsav has warned that right-wing nationalists
could attempt to assassinate Sharon. He said the atmosphere was
very similar to that during the run-up to Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabins assassination in November 1995 by a religious fanatic
opposed to any peace deal with the Palestinians. Cabinet ministers
have been fitted for flak jackets.
That the very social forces Sharon cultivated for so long have,
like a Frankenstein monster, turned against him is an indication
of the depths of the political and social crisis facing the Zionist
state. To understand why this situation has emerged, it is necessary
to review the basis upon which Israel was founded and the origins
and growth of these right-wing layers.
The founding of Israel and the political conceptions
of the Zionist movement
The establishment of the state of Israel was bound up with
the defeats of the European working class in the 1920s and 1930s
and the spread of fascism, which led to the eruption of the second
world imperialist war in a quarter century. In the course of World
War II, more than half of European Jewry was exterminated.
Prior to the war, political Zionism held little appeal for
Jews, many of who were closely identified with the socialist movement.
Within Palestine itself, a socialist movement fought to unite
Arabs and Jews and create a democratic and secular Palestinian
state that would reorganise society on socialist lines.
Several factors led to the creation of the Zionist state in
1948. There was an outpouring of sympathy on the part of ordinary
people for the plight of the Jews, hundreds of thousands of whom
remained in displaced persons camps in Europe several years after
the end of the war. The US, the Soviet Union and France cynically
manipulated public opinion to rally the support of their client
states in a vote of the United Nations General Assembly to establish
a Jewish state on part of Mandate Palestine. These powers supported
the creation of Israel largely as a means of dislodging Britain
from the oil-rich Middle East in furtherance of their own geopolitical
interests.
The Zionist movementa minority within Mandate Palestinehad
long been bitterly divided about the boundaries of such a state,
the means by which statehood was to be achieved, and what to do
about the hundred of thousands of Arabs who lived in Palestine.
The Labour Zionists under the leadership of David Ben Gurion
took a pragmatic approach in relation to the size of the Zionist
state: establish a Jewish state, however small, and adjust the
boundaries later. Ben Gurion, who became Israels first prime
minister, also understood that the viability of such a state,
surrounded by enemies and carved out of a small portion of what
was once the Syrian province of the Ottoman Empire, depended upon
the support of a powerful backer.
Vladimir Jabotinsky was the founder of the Jewish Legion and
leader of the Revisionists, who called for a more ruthless and
expansionist policy. In 1923, he had written an article entitled
The Iron Wall. He declared, Zionist colonisation
must be either terminated or carried out against the wishes of
the native population. This colonisation can, therefore, be continued
and make progress only under the protection of a power independent
of the native populationan iron wall, which will be in a
position to resist the pressure of the native population. This
in toto is our policy towards the Arabs.... A voluntary reconciliation
with the Arabs is out of the question either now or in the near
future.
Jabotinsky became increasingly hostile to what he perceived
as Zionist acquiescence to Britains disregard for its obligations
to the Jews. He demanded that Transjordan be included in the Jewish
National Home in Palestine. He poured scorn on the Labour Zionists
who eschewed the restoration of their own armed forces, which
had been disbanded at the end of World War I.
If you wish to colonise a land in which people are already
living, you must provide a garrison for the land, or find some
rich man or benefactor who will provide a garrison
on your behalf. Or elseor else, give up your colonisation,
for without an armed force which will render physically impossible
any attempt to destroy or prevent this colonisation, colonisation
is impossible, not difficult, not dangerous,
but IMPOSSIBLE!...
Zionism is a colonising adventure and therefore it stands
or falls by the question of armed force. It is important...to
speak Hebrew, but unfortunately it is even more important to be
able to shootor else I am through with playing at colonisation.
Two years later, Jabotinsky founded the Revisionist party,
which was to become the Zionist brownshirts, more and more closely
mimicking the militarism of Mussolini and Hitler, although Jabotinsky
naturally never referred to himself as a fascist. He was quite
clear about his objectives. We want a Jewish empire,
he told a journalist in 1935.
The Revisionists and its armed wing, the Irgun, led by Menachem
Begin, and later the Stern Gang, among whose leaders was another
future prime minister, Yitzhak Shamir, waged a campaign of terror
aimed at driving out the British and establishing a Jewish state
on the entire land of Biblical Palestine, including Transjordan.
With the Jews a minority in Palestine, such a state would necessarily
mean expelling the Arab population to ensure its Jewish character.
The war between Israel and its Arab neighbours that followed
the United Nations partition of PalestineIsraels
so-called War of Independenceled to the flight or expulsion
of hundreds of thousands of Arabs and their transformation into
refugees. The Revisionists terrorist activities in furtherance
of their policy of ethnic cleansing, or population transfer,
carried out by the Irgun and the Stern gang and sanctioned by
the Labour Zionists, played a major role in driving the Palestinians
from their homes.
But so bitter were the divisions between the Revisionists and
Labour Zionists that all-out civil war nearly broke out only days
after the end of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war over whether to try
to capture East Jerusalem. It was only averted when the right-wing
forces backed down after the sinking of the Altalena, laden with
arms to continue the war, by the Labour governments forces.
Surrounded by hostile neighbours, Israel was from its inception
a garrison state and placed its Arab citizens under military law.
However, for the next 20 years, the Labour Zionists were to dominate
political life in Israel and the extreme right-wing forces, like
their counterparts elsewhere, were to remain in the political
wilderness until the late 1970s.
While initially the Labour Zionists presented Israel as a David
fighting an Arab Goliath and clothed themselves in socialist colours,
these myths were soon punctured.
When France and Britain invaded Egypt in 1956 in response to
Gamal Abdel Nassers nationalisation of the Suez Canal, Israeli
troops seized the Sinai desert. But their actions conflicted with
US interests in the oil-rich region. The Eisenhower administration
refused to accept the former colonial powers attempts to
regain control of the Canal and maintain their influence in the
Middle East, and ordered Britain, France and Israel to pull out.
By 1967, the situation had changed. While the US had largely
seen off Britains and Frances influence in the region,
it now faced the growing radicalisation of the Arab masses and
Moscows growing interest and influence in the region, marked
especially by Egypts turn to the Soviet Union for development
loans and military aid.
Starting with President Kennedys sale of Hawk missiles
to Israel in 1963, the US began to view Israel, alongside Saudi
Arabia and Iran, as a means of promoting its own interests. While
the relationship has not always been a smooth one, it was from
this point that US aid began to increase its aid to Israel to
the $3 billion a year that it is today.
To be continued
See Also:
Terrorism and the
origins of Israel
[21 June 2003]
The political dead
end of Labour Zionism
[5 April 2001]
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