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Israels crisis and the historic contradictions of Zionism
By Bill Van Auken
16 May 2008
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We are reposting the following article which first appeared
on the World Socialist Web Site on May 29, 1998 after the
state of Israel marked its 50th anniversary.
Israel marked the 50th anniversary of its founding under conditions
of mounting political and social crisis within the Zionist state
and escalating tensions with the Palestinian people in the territories
still occupied by Israeli forces, as well as with the surrounding
Arab world.
None of the official commemorations organized in Israel itself,
nor the glitzy and superficial celebrations staged by Israels
friends in the U.S. and elsewhere, even touched upon the profound
historical questions underlying the foundation of the Israeli
state.
Within Israels birth and evolution are concentrated the
great unresolved contradictions of the 20th century. Its essential
origins lie in one of historys greatest crimes against humanity,
the Nazi Holocaust. The extermination of six million European
Jews was, in turn, the terrible price paid for the crisis of the
working class movement brought on by the Stalinist degeneration
of the Soviet Union and the Communist International. Stalinisms
crimes and its domination over the workers movement prevented
the working class from putting an end to the crisis-ridden capitalist
system, which found in fascism its last line of defense.
The defeats of the working class, the crimes of Stalinism and
the horrors of the Holocaust created the historical conditions
for Israels creation and the Zionist movements largely
successful attempt, aided both by US imperialism and Stalinism,
to equate Zionism with world Jewry. It was a movement and a state
founded ultimately on discouragement and despair. Stalinisms
betrayals produced disillusionment in the socialist alternative
that had exercised such a powerful appeal to Jewish working people
all over the world. The crimes of German fascism were presented
as the ultimate proof that it was impossible to vanquish anti-Semitism
in Europe or anywhere else. Zionisms answer was to get a
state and an army and beat the historical oppressors of the Jewish
people at their own game.
The tragic irony of this supposed solution is Israels
association of the Jewish peopletraditionally and historically
connected with the struggle for tolerance and freedomwith
the brutal suppression of another oppressed population.
David Ben-Gurion read out the declaration of Israels
independence on May 14, 1948, the day before Britains mandate
over Palestine was to expire. Within less than a year, Israeli
military forces had succeeded in carving out the countrys
present internationally-recognized borders, while over three-quarters
of a million Palestinian Arabs were driven from their homes in
a systematic campaign of terrorism and intimidation.
Ben Gurion described the realization of Israeli statehood as
the culmination of the Jewish revolution. It represented
the achievement of the central political aim of Zionism, the Jewish
nationalist movement founded in the latter part of the 19th century.
Before World War II, Zionism had remained a relatively isolated
movement, drawing its support primarily from sections of the Jewish
middle class. Even within Palestine, there existed among Jewish
workers a powerful class sentiment for uniting Jewish and Arab
workers in a common movement against capitalism.
While it took the Holocaust to turn Zionism into a state power,
the real relations between the crimes carried out by Nazism against
European Jewry and the Zionist movement have been the subject
of systematic historical distortion. Israel is portrayed as the
necessary haven for Jews fleeing the German death camps. Yet the
attitude of Zionism toward the struggle to save Jews from extermination
was not so simple.
This is one of many subjects which Israeli historians have
begun to examine. Known as the new historians, the
post-Zionist or revisionist school, the
emergence of this critical attitude toward Israels history
is one of the most profound signs of the growing crisis of Zionism
as an ideology and of Israel as a society.
Among these new historians is Zeev Sternhell, the author of
The Founding Myths of Israel, recently published in English.
Sternhells book debunks some of Zionisms most powerful
myths, principally that those Zionist leaders who founded Israel
were attempting to establish a new type of society based upon
egalitarian principles and even socialism.
This historian establishes that Zionism was by no mean unique.
It arose as a peculiar expression of the trend of eastern European
nationalism of the 19th century; one based not on universal democratic
principles, but rather on exclusivist conceptions of racial, religious
and linguistic hegemony. Ironically, a movement that claimed to
stand for the liberation of Jews found substantial common ground
with anti-Semites and right-wing nationalist precursors of German
fascism.
Zionism, he writes, was from the beginning the preoccupation
of a minority, which understood the Jewish problem not in terms
of physical existence and the provision of economic security,
but as an enterprise for rescuing the nation from the danger of
collective annihilation. It perceived the greatest danger
of annihilation as coming from the assimilation of Jews into modern
society, particularly through the attraction of growing numbers
of Jewish workers to the socialist movement.
To the extent that the founders of the Zionist state attempted
to identify Zionism with the labor movement, equality and socialism
it was, Sternhell writes, a mobilizing myth, designed
to win working-class Jews to the cause of nationalism. He makes
the case that this use of socialist phraseology had much in common
with other national socialist movements seeking nationalist
revival in Europe, ultimately giving rise to Nazism.
Certainly the case can be made that many other nationalist
movements in the course of the 20th century, including Arab nationalism,
which has represented itself as socialist and egalitarian, have
utilized such a mobilizing myth. In every case, such
ideologies have the purpose of covering up the interests of the
national bourgeoisie and suppressing the independent struggle
of the working class.
As for Israels justification as the sole possible haven
for Jews fleeing Nazi oppression, Sternhell, as well as other
historiansTom Segev, author of The Seventh Million, the
Israelis and the Holocaust, for examplehave presented
ample evidence that the rescue of European Jewry was never a primary
concern for Zionism as a movement, and that Ben-Gurion and other
Zionist leaders reacted with indifference.
At the outbreak of the Second World War, with Nazisms
threat to the Jews of Europe becoming ever clearer, Ben-Gurion
spelled out the principle which was to guide the Zionist movements
attitude throughout the Holocaust: Zionist considerations
take precedence over Jewish sentiments...we should act according
to Zionist considerations and not merely Jewish considerations,
for a Jew is not automatically a Zionist. Throughout the
war he argued successfully against those who suggested that the
Jewish Agency in Palestine turn its attention from the building
of Eretz Israel to the rescue of Jews from Nazism.
At the same time the Zionists lost no time in making use of
the catastrophe in Europe for their own ends. Their efforts were
successful, as Europes stateless and homeless surviving
Jewish population was directed to Palestine for very definite
geopolitical reasons. Washington, which had closed US borders
to Jews fleeing Nazi oppression, saw the emergence of the Jewish
state in the Middle East as an instrument for asserting its own
hegemony in the region at the expense of the old colonial powers,
Britain and France.
Founded in the struggle to wrest control of the land from its
Arab inhabitants, Israel was from its origins a militarized state,
with the army serving as the central pillar of society. Surrounded
by hostile Arab states and posturing as a new form of society,
founded upon equality and vaguely socialist principles, the new
state was widely perceived as an underdog, deserving of popular
sympathy.
Both realities and perceptions underwent change, however, with
the growth of Israel into the undisputed military force and sole
nuclear power in the region. First came the 1956 Suez war, in
which Israel briefly seized the Sinai Peninsula. The 1967 war
redrew the map of the Middle East once again, setting the parameters
of the current conflict. With US backing, Israel invaded Egypt,
Syria and Jordan, laying hold of the West Bank of the Jordan River,
the Golan Heights and the Gaza Strip, which it occupies to this
day. Zionism and the state of Israel emerged as a force of aggression
and expansionism. Israel has fought further wars in Lebanon, where
it continues to occupy a security zone in the south.
Israels initial military expansion was made possible
by a massive and continuous infusion of US economic and military
aid. Underlying the $3 billion in annual aid, Washingtons
special relation with Israel has nothing to do with
shared principles or sympathy for the historic oppression of the
Jewish people. Rather, it backs Israel as a garrison state which
serves to suppress the revolutionary strivings of the masses of
the Middle East, while providing a means of extending US influence
in this strategically vital oil-producing region.
Israeli militarism went hand in hand with the growth of reactionary
political and social tendencies within Israel itself. Israels
occupation and administration of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip,
exercising a political dictatorship over roughly a million Palestinians,
not only exposed the oppressive character of the Israeli state,
but brought to the surface all of the contradictions embedded
in Zionism as a movement.
In 1968 Zionist settlements were begun in the occupied West
Bank and Gaza, on the theory that these paramilitary outposts
would serve as a line of defense against attacks by Palestinian
guerrillas on Israel proper. While the Labor Party government
initially presented the settlements as no more than a defensive
parameter, which would not preclude the handing back of the territories
to Jordan and Egypt, the issue of the status of the West Bank
and Gaza quickly became the focal point of Israeli politics.
The right-wing opposition under the leadership of Menachem
Begin demanded that the territories be brought under Israeli sovereignty
on the grounds that they were the Biblical lands of Samaria and
Judea, promised by God to the Jewish people. Thirty years later
the issue has yet to be resolved, despite the much-heralded Middle
East peace brokered by the Clinton administration and signed by
both Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization. One hundred
and forty four settlements are scattered throughout the territories,
inhabited by 160,000 settlers, many of them extreme nationalists
and religious zealots who are heavily armed.
The settlements continue to grow at the rate of 9 percent a
year, despite the agreement signed with the PLO. The Israeli government
insists that its forces must control the access roads to these
enclaves and their connection to Israel itself. This alone exposes
the largely token character of any independent Palestinian
state that might emerge from this process. The Palestinian Authority
is left to police small patches of land, mostly impoverished cities,
while it remains surrounded and cut off by Israeli troops. As
the stalemate in the US-brokered talks makes clear, the Israeli
state is not prepared to make any fundamental alterations in the
present situation.
Israels motivation for signing the Middle East accord
was, in the first place, to forestall a revolutionary uprising
by the Palestinian masses in the occupied territories, which had
taken embryonic form in the intifada which began in 1987. Despite
sustained and brutal repression, Israel proved incapable of putting
down this rebellion without seeking the direct collaboration of
the PLO.
At the same time, the Israeli ruling class was anxious to escape
the punishing economic and social costs associated with the occupation,
both in terms of military expenditures and the pariah status which
Israel acquired throughout the Arab world and elsewhere.
But as the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin in November 1995
and the subsequent return to power by the Israeli right under
Benjamin Netanyahu have shown, it is not so easy to escape the
historical contradictions of Zionism. The settlement policy begun
by the Labor Party spawned a right-wing nationalist, semi-fascist
layer, which produced the assassin that claimed Rabins life.
Increasingly, the debate over the future of the settlements, as
well as the associated question of the increasingly bitter conflict
between religious and secular Israeli Jews, is spoken of in terms
of a civil war.
Wielding disproportionate power in the government, Israels
ultra-Orthodox political parties have increasingly imposed the
dictates of Jewish religious law in areas previously deemed secular.
All administrative control over births, marriages and burial arrangements
has been placed in the hands of the Orthodox rabbinate, much to
the consternation of Conservative, Reform and secular Jews. Orthodox
members of the Knesset, who play a pivotal role in cobbling together
coalition governments, are demanding laws that would close down
roads and force an end to flights by El Al, the national airline,
on Saturdays. Many communities have become bitterly divided between
Orthodox and secular Jews, reaching the point of physical confrontation.
No less deep are the social chasms that have emerged in Israel.
In a country that once claimed to need every Jewish immigrant
for the labor of national construction, 8.2 percent of the population
is unemployed, according to the official figures. The ranks of
the jobless are concentrated in impoverished development
towns, like Ofkim in the Negev. Rioting broke out there
six months ago after the towns unemployment rate reached
14.3 percent.
Ethiopian Jews also rioted last year over their treatment as
second-class citizens. The resentment of Sephardic Jews, those
originating in the Arab world, against the Ashkenazic, or European
Jewish, establishment, has emerged as a volatile and pivotal factor
in Israeli politics. Menachem Begin was able to manipulate this
resentment in a rightward direction, to no small degree because
of the glaring contradiction between the socialist pretensions
of Israels Zionist founders and the immense social polarization
which exists in Israeli society today.
An essential economic contradiction continues to undermine
both the Zionist project and the conception underlying the Middle
East peace accord of a new economic partnership between the Israeli
bourgeoisie and its Arab counterparts. The fastest growing sector
within Israel is the high-technology industry, which produces
neither for the national nor the regional market. Fully 96 percent
of Israels exports and 93 percent of its imports are conducted
with areas outside the region.
While the impasse over the occupied territories has largely
frozen the growth of Arab-Israeli economic ties, the development
of such relations would ultimately take place at the expense of
the masses of working people, Arab and Jewish alike. The Arab
world offers the Israeli capitalist the prospect of new reserves
of cheap labor to further depress the living standards of workers
in Israel itself.
Within the areas administered by the PLO in Gaza and the West
Bank, meanwhile, the Palestinian workers are finding that their
conditions of social oppression have only continued to worsen,
while a small layer of government bureaucrats and businessmen
with political connections are seeking their fortunes.
Fifty years after Israels founding, the reactionary Zionist
utopia of a national state in which the Jews of the world could
find sanctuary, unity and equality has been realized in the form
of a capitalist state created through the dispossession of another
people and maintained through war, repression and social inequality
at home. As the assassination of Rabin and other violent acts
by the extreme right-wing forces cultivated by the Zionist state
have shown, there is a danger that Israel itself will reproduce
the conditions of dictatorship and civil war from which an earlier
generation of European Jews fled.
The dead-end of Zionism is a peculiar expression of the failure
of all movements that have based themselves on the perspective
of nationalism to resolve any of the fundamental questions confronting
the masses of working people. This is no less true for the Arab
countries, where ruling cliques have manipulated nationalist sentiments
and bitter resentment of Israel in order to divert the social
struggles of the working class.
There is only way out of the malignant contradictions of Israeli
society. That is to unite Arab and Jewish workers in a common
struggle against capitalism and for the building of a socialist
society, which would tear down the artificial borders which divide
the peoples and economies of the region. Only in this way can
the region liberate itself from war and oppression, fueled by
the profit drive of foreign capitalists and the native ruling
classes.
See Also:
Deep unease as Israel celebrates its
60th anniversary
[8 May 2008]
Yasser Arafat: 1929-2004
[12 November 2004]
A critical
review of Daniel Goldhagens Hitlers Willing Executioners
[17 April 1997]
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