Trump’s
America, Netanyahu’s Israel
Adam Shatz
ttps://www.lrb.co.uk/2019/04/18/adam-shatz/trumps-america-netanyahus-israel?
Israel’s legislative elections on 9 April were a tribute to
Binyamin Netanyahu’s transformation of the political landscape.* At no point where they discussed in terms
of which candidates might be persuaded by (non-existent) American pressure, or
the ‘international community’, to end the occupation. This time it was a question
of which party leader could be trusted by Israeli Jews – Palestinian citizens
of Israel are now officially second-class – to manage the occupation, and to
expedite the various tasks that the Jewish state has mastered: killing Gazans,
bulldozing homes, combatting the scourge of BDS, and conflating anti-Zionism
with anti-Semitism. With his promise to annex the West Bank, Netanyahu had won
even before the election was held. It wasn’t simply Trump’s recognition of
Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights that sped the incumbent on his way;
it was the nature of the conversation – and the fact that the leader of the opposition was Benny Gantz, the IDF commander who presided over 2014
‘Operation Protection Edge’, in which more than 2000 Gazans were killed.
Illusions about the ‘peace process’ – and Israel’s ‘search for
peace’ – die hard. The hopes invested in ‘peace’ were once
immense, but it has never looked so shaky, even in America, which has
underwritten these fictions for decades and rewarded Israel handsomely for
paying lip service to them. American liberals no longer lament the fact that
Netanyahu has taken Israel off its preordained, conciliatory course, and hope
that ‘the left’ might steer it back. There is no left in Israel aside from a
few heroic groupuscules. Netanyahu’s Israel – illiberal, exclusionary, racist –
is now the political center.
I used to
call me a non-Zionist, rather than an anti-Zionist: the latter term seemed
to traduce the origins of Zionism, which arose as a response to the existential
threat to Jewish life in Europe. ‘Anti-Zionism’ overlooked the richness of the
debates within early Zionism. The ‘cultural Zionist’ Ahad Ha’am, for example,
supported the creation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, but not a Jewish
state, and castigated ‘territorial’ Zionists for imagining that ‘Palestine is a
land almost entirely deserted, an uncultivated desert,’ and that ‘the Arabs are
desert savages, a people like donkeys, incapable of seeing and understanding
what is happening around them. This is a great mistake.’ One of the founders of
bi-nationalism – what’s now envisaged as a single state, accommodating both people’s
national aspirations – Ha’am considered himself a Zionist. So did the
journalist and activist Uri Avnery, one of the fiercest critics of Israel’s
wars and occupation, who died last year, aged 94. But these ‘Zionists’ do not
represent actually existing Zionism.
In 1948, Hannah Arendt, whose critique of territorial Zionism
owed much to Ha’am, warned that after the Arab-Israeli war:
the ‘victorious’ Jews would live surrounded by the hostile Arab population, secluded inside ever-threatened borders, preoccupied with matters of defense to a degree that would submerge all other interests and
activities . . . political thought would center on military strategy; economic
development would be determined exclusively by the needs of war. And all this
would be the fate of a nation that – no matter how many immigrants it could
still absorb and how far it extended its boundaries . . . – would still remain
a very small people greatly outnumbered by hostile neighbors.
Arendt’s prediction was in large part borne out. More remarkable
still, few Israelis – or their supporters abroad, among Jews and Evangelicals –
fret over this ‘fate’. Arendt’s warning that an expansionist Israel would never
realize the dream of Herzl and the founders, and become a ‘normal’ state, has
lost its charge because its abnormality is the new normal. Israel now looks
more like a pioneer of illiberal, ethnocratic nationalism, a model for the
likes of Orbán, Modi, and Trump.
Today Israelis see no need to conceal, much less extenuate
themselves for, their country’s militarism or racism. In the 1960s and 1970s,
Western tourists went to Israel to take part in collective farming on
kibbutzim. Police officers and soldiers now go to learn new methods of
collective punishment and surveillance. For Europe’s greatest internal victims
to have refined the repression of other people into science is now regarded
as an advantage rather than an embarrassing secret, or indeed a tragedy. And
with Trump’s help, Zionism’s id has been emancipated from its superego. The Nation-State
Law, the American Embassy’s move to Jerusalem, the US president’s recognition
of Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights, a possible annexation of large
swathes of the West Bank: all these mark an intensification of what Meron
Benvenisti called the ‘Judaisation’ of Israel-Palestine, at the expense of its
indigenous inhabitants. Even hummus, tabbouleh, and za‘atar are now proclaimed
as ‘Israeli’ specialties.
*
Security is
the paramount concern, Israel says, pointing to its enemies (Hamas, Hizbullah,
Iran) and to the growing volatility on its border with Syria. These are not
irrational fears, but, as in the past, they serve to justify expansion,
generating further insecurity, which in turn justifies further land grabs. If
security on the basis of coexistence were truly its aim, Israel might have
taken up land-for-peace offers made by the Arabs, notably the Saudi peace plan
in 2002. But Israel has been less interested in security than in land, with or
without peace: a position it can afford thanks to its overwhelming military
advantage over the Palestinians. The Arab states have ceased to pressure
Israel: their fear of Iran outweighs whatever solidarity they feel with the
Palestinians.
The extreme character of Israel’s stance vis-à-vis its Arab
population can be measured by the Nation-State Law, which explicitly legalizes
the inequality – officially denied for decades – between Jews and Arabs. The
law’s most vociferous critics were not Palestinian citizens of Israel, who have
no illusions about the state’s intentions, but the Druze – at 1.5 percent of
Israel’s population, a minority within an Arab minority – who serve in the
Israeli military and are seen by many Palestinians as traitors. As Israeli
Druze have discovered, to be a non-Jew in Israel, no matter how loyal, is to be
less than a full citizen, tolerated at best by the ruling ethnic majority – a
‘pariah’, as Arendt would have said. That Israel has succeeded in creating a
new class of pariahs is a curious achievement, given the history of Jews in the
West. The impact on Palestinian life, in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, has
been enormous. But the perpetrators have also paid a price. In the words of the
historian Enzo Traverso, Israel has ‘put an end to Jewish modernity. Diaspora
Judaism had been the critical conscience of the Western world; Israel survives
as one of its mechanisms of domination.’
*
Accused of anti-Semitism for his
criticisms of Israel, Noam Chomsky would often point out that in Israel his
position would hardly have raised an eyebrow: the problem lay with the absence
of debate in the US. Today the situation is nearly the reverse. The debate has
never been more constricted in Israel: even Jewish dissenters have seen their
freedoms curtailed. In the US, as the power of the Israel lobby begins to
crumble, ferocious arguments are erupting inside the Democratic Party, where
the old guard, deeply pro-Israel, faces an insurgent challenge from politicians
and activists outraged by the occupation. Whether or not US support for Israel
is ‘all about the Benjamins’, in the words of the Minnesota congresswoman Ilhan
Omar, the old guard is much better funded. But the younger, dissenting wing of
the party is more energetic and closer to the base: of the Democrats running
for president, only Cory Booker, a senator from New Jersey, spoke at the most
recent conference of AIPAC (the American Israel Public Affairs Committee). A
significant portion of the anti-occupation movement in the US is Jewish,
notably the group Jewish Voice for Peace, staunch supporters of BDS. Traverso
is only partly right to say that diaspora Judaism has ceased to supply the West
with a critical conscience.
Israel’s ultras inside the Democratic Party have argued,
correctly, that support for Israel is not only about donations (‘the
Benjamins’) from Jewish supporters of Israel, but about something harder to
dislodge: faith. Senator Charles Schumer of New York recently claimed to be
acting on divine orders: ‘You know, my name . . . comes from the word shomer, guardian, the watcher . . . And I believe Hashem’ – God – ‘actually gave me that name. One of
my roles, very important in the United States Senate, is to be . . . a or the shomer Yisrael. And I will
continue to be that with every bone in my body.’ Booker is perhaps more alert
to the influential role of the Benjamins, but he, too, spoke in the language of
faith when he addressed AIPAC: ‘Israel is not political to me . . . I was a
supporter of Israel well before I was a United States senator . . . If I forget
thee, o Israel, may I cut off my right hand.’ Ilhan Omar was accused of
anti-Semitism for pointing up the ‘political influence’ in the US ‘that says it
is OK to push for allegiance to a foreign country’, but Schumer and Booker made
no secret of their allegiance and faced none of the insults hurled at Omar.
There was no murmur of dissent from supporters of Israel when Trump spoke to a
group of American Jews and referred to Netanyahu as ‘your prime minister’.
The Trump administration recently prevented the Palestinian
activist Omar Barghouti, one of the founders of the BDS movement, from entering
the US. Barghouti, a permanent resident of Israel who has a valid US visa, was
scheduled to do a speaking tour and go to his daughter’s wedding. He is a
non-violent activist, but this doesn’t count in his favor among those who used
to deplore Palestinian armed struggle. On the contrary: now that the
Palestinians are mastering an effective means of non-violent protest, Israel
claims that it is worse than terrorism because it ‘delegitimizes’ the Jewish
state. Anti-Zionism, on this view, is not simply an occasional cover for
anti-Semitism; it is anti-Semitism. The Trump administration has signed up to
this thesis; so has Emmanuel Macron. But if anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism, one
would be hard pressed to find a Palestinian, or an Arab, or a Muslim, who is
not an anti-Semite. And if anti-Zionism is the only form of anti-Semitism that
Israel, the state of the Jews, considers a threat, then Hungary and other
Central European states intent on revising their histories of collaboration in
the Holocaust, purging their public life of ‘globalists’ such as George Soros,
and pursuing their own draconian policies towards ethnic minorities (Roma,
above all), can declare themselves friends of Israel and get a kosher seal of
approval.
Is there an anti-Semitism of the
left? Certainly. Anti-Semitism, like anti-black racism, is a virus in Western
society. But it is one thing to acknowledge its existence in movements that
want to see an end to Israel’s occupation – largely left-leaning – and another
to claim that it is their defining feature. Israel has recast anti-Semitism in
such a self-serving way that it has become difficult to distinguish between
those who take Israel the task as a Jewish state, and those who criticize it as a Jewish state: as an
exclusionary ethnocracy and an occupying power. Israel has also appropriated
the right to define what is and isn’t anti-Semitism by forging alliances with
parties, states, and religious groups that traffic openly in anti-Semitism. That
Israel seems untroubled by these alliances – and simultaneously accuses
left-wing critics of anti-Semitism, often invoking the Holocaust – has not only
made it easier for left-wing anti-Semites to deny the charges; it also makes it
harder for those on the left to recognize genuine anti-Semitism in their
colleagues and in themselves.
The recent attacks on Jews in Europe, the Bannonist discourse
about Soros and other sinister agents of globalization, the neo-Nazi chants in
Charlottesville of ‘Jews will not replace us’: all are signs that ‘the Jewish
question’, in spite of the integration of Jews in the West, has yet to be
resolved. As Aimé Césaire told Frantz Fanon, ‘when you hear someone insulting
the Jews, pay attention, he is talking about you.’ Anti-Semitism in the US is
of no structural significance: it does not prejudice Jewish opportunity, as
racism does for black people; Judaism is not invoked by the state, as Islam is,
to prevent people from entering the country or to justify the racial profiling
and surveillance of American citizens. But it can flare up with fatal
consequences, such as the massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue last year in
Pittsburgh. Trump, who said there were ‘very fine people’ among the neo-Nazis
in Charlottesville, isn’t too troubled by those deadly forms of anti-Semitism.
But he has already begun to smear the Democratic Party as anti-Semitic, and
Ilhan Omar as a jihadist, in what is surely a premonition of his strategy in
the 2020 election.
Omar’s tweet about ‘the Benjamins’ was glib and inaccurate:
support for Israel isn’t ‘all’ about campaign donations. Amy Kaplan argues in Our American Israel that
the special relationship was never simply a reflection of Jewish influence in
America. It draws on the countries’ histories – and imaginaries – as
colonial-settler states, and has been reinforced by overlapping imperial
interests. But Omar’s remarks were bracing: she seemed determined to tell it
like it is. They also signaled that the conversation about Israel is changing,
as disadvantaged American minorities, including blacks and Muslims, overcome a
range of inhibitions – including the fear of being called anti-Semitic – and
begin to speak frankly on the Israel/Palestine question. For politicians such
as Omar and Rashida Tlaib, a Palestinian congresswoman from Detroit, and for
black activists and thinkers such as Michelle Alexander and Angela Davis,
Palestine is, above all, a matter of racial justice. The process of reframing
this question is likely to be messy and uncomfortable, not least for Jews
accustomed to leading the discussion. It also suggests a very American vision
of Israel/Palestine, with the West Bank, reimagined as Selma, a site of
oppression where struggle and redemption are waiting in the wings. But this is
no more of an illusion than the vision of Israel it challenges, ‘the Middle
East’s only democracy’, and it aims to end, rather than uphold, a system of
oppression. Now that the conversation has started, it will be hard to stop.
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