‘Settler violence is part of Israel’s official policy,’ experts say — but ‘Washington Post’ buries that angle
"Continuous, systemic violence meted out by
settlers is part of Israel’s official policy, driving massive takeover of
Palestinian" lands, B'Tselem says in a groundbreaking report, but the
Washington Post's recent article on settler violence suggests that the Israeli
government is taking it on vigorously.
BY PHILIP WEISS NOVEMBER 30, 2021
Earlier this month, the human rights group
B’Tselem issued an important report
titled, “State Business: Israel’s
misappropriation of land in the West Bank through settler violence” that said
the Israeli government “fully supports and assists” the spike in settler
violence. Israel is using the settlers to widen the “Jewish-only space” on Palestinian
lands, a process that has gone on for decades, B’Tselem said:
Settler violence against Palestinians serves as a
major informal tool at the hands of the state to take over more and more West
Bank land. The state fully supports and assists these acts of violence, and its
agents sometimes participate in them directly. As such, settler violence is a
form of government policy, aided and abetted by official state authorities with
their active participation…
Today the good news is that the pogroms by settlers
against Palestinians in the West Bank are finally getting coverage in the
western press. The Guardian covered settler violence on
Sunday, the Washington Post covered it yesterday:
“Hate crime attacks by Israeli settlers on Palestinian civilians spike in the
West Bank.”
The problem is that the Post article
buries the critical issue: the charge that the Israeli government “fully
supports and assists” the violence as a means of removing Palestinians.
The Post characterizes settlers as freelance actors, who
commit beatings, arson, and vandalism against Palestinians who live nearby– even
though many “leaders” in Israel have called for a crackdown. The newspaper
accepts the Israeli government’s line at face value:
Defense Minister Benny Gantz convened a meeting
of security officials earlier this month and said the military would issue new
orders against “standing by,” directing soldiers to do more to prevent the
incidents and protect Palestinians, according to media reports. “Hate crimes
are the root from which terrorism grows and we must uproot it,” Gantz said in a
statement after the meeting.
Compare the Post to The Guardian,
which credited B’Tselem’s allegation prominently:
The Israeli human rights agency B’Tselem
claimed this month that the state has
“harnessed settler violence to promote its policy of taking over Palestinian
land for Jewish use”.
Israeli human rights organizations claim [settler
violence] is increasingly being used as a strategy to try to clear many of the
300,000 Palestinian residents in the rural 60% of the occupied West Bank
designated as Area C in the Oslo accords.
Arguably the settlers were trying by force what
Israel has long attempted by bureaucratic means.
The Guardian then quoted two other human rights experts
saying that the government is in on the violence.
[T]he notion that settler violence is confined to
an ultra-extremist fringe [does not] sit easily with the charge of
agencies such as Yesh Din, supported by growing evidence, that it is “part
of a calculated strategy for dispossessing Palestinians of their land”. Or that
of Yehuda Shaul, a committed supporter of a two-state agreement with the
Palestinians, that “settler violence is not a story of 50 lunatics out on the
edge of the movement … but an essential step in the evolution of the settlement
project”.
The Washington Post only cites
B’Tselem backhandedly at the very end of the article and says that the Israeli
army is trying to stop the violence.
In a statement, an Israel Defense Forces
spokesman said, “Any claim that the IDF supports or permits violence by
residents in the area is false.”
But numerous Israeli experts say the government
approves the violence.
Haaretz’s military
reporter, Amos Harel, said the police and army are “passive” because the
government doesn’t want them to take action. Harel spoke on a podcast two weeks ago for
the Israel Policy Forum.
You are assuming that someone in charge of them
actually wants them to act. I don’t think that’s the case… My guess would be
those people [the settlers] feel they can do anything. They’ve been there for
so long that the military and police are helpless. No one in government is
actually interested in that. Ministers from the left would now and then pay lip
service to do something to solve the matter. Other than that the government and
the state are weak and will not do anything aggressive enough to stop that.
This is why this is rising….
And last month Americans for Peace Now published a podcast in
which two Israeli human rights experts said the settler violence is serving
state aims. The settlers act as the eyes and ears of the army, Hagit Ofran of
Peace Now said, in a very traditional relationship in Israeli expansion.
While Yossi Alpher told Americans for Peace Now yesterday
about the political support for expansion inside the new Israeli government:
The right-wing parties Yamina, New Hope, and
Yisrael Beitenu, want to avoid territorial compromise and expand settlements to
cement control over the 60 percent of the West Bank fully occupied by the
IDF….And foregoing 50 percent of the West Bank is the most that the more
moderate segments of right-religious Israel can accept.
Alpher used the word “apartheid,” which B’Tselem has
also used in its reports.
The right-wingers behind this approach basically
want the land without the Arabs. The Palestinians increasingly understand this
as apartheid.
The Washington Post does not state
the apartheid allegation. Nor does it quote from the B’Tselem report,
despite the overwhelming documentation that B’Tselem offered for its
allegation. Some of that data:
Violence committed by settlers against
Palestinians has been documented since the very early days of the occupation in
countless government documents and dossiers, thousands of testimonies from
Palestinians and soldiers, books, reports by Palestinian, Israeli, and
international human rights organizations, and thousands of media stories. This
broad, consistent documentation has had almost no effect on settler violence
against Palestinians, which has long since become part and parcel of life under
the occupation in the West Bank.
The report presents five case studies that
illustrate how continuous, systemic violence meted out by settlers is part of
Israel’s official policy, driving a massive takeover of Palestinian farmland and
pastureland. In the testimonies collected as part of the research, Palestinians
describe how this violence undermines the bedrock of Palestinian communities’
lives and diminishes their income. Residents describe how without protection,
under the pressure of violence and fear and with no other choice, Palestinian
communities abandon or scale back traditional vocations such as sheep and goat
farming or various seasonal crops, which allowed them to make a dignified
living and live comfortably for generations.
The Guardian article is forthright
about this issue. It describes the recent “pogrom” in which settlers from two
illegal settlements descended on the neighboring village of Mufakara and stoned
and attacked villagers. Israeli forces were on the settlers’ side, firing
teargas and stun grenades, and rubber bullets to try to affect the evacuation of
the village.
The Guardian said that Benny Gantz
had responded to “rising diplomatic concern – including in Washington” and
ordered the top brass to toughen enforcement against “what he called ‘hate
crimes’ in the West Bank,” but the Guardian then quoted Avner
Gvaryahu of Breaking the Silence saying that words mean nothing, only action
counts, and “So far, settler violence has been ravaging on and Gantz has done
nothing.”
What a pity that our media cannot be so honest about
these fundamental issues.
It appears that the American establishment is
determined to consecrate Joe Biden’s honeymoon with Naftali Bennett, and Gantz
is playing along. “There is a sense—a thorough and very dangerous
misapprehension—in many quarters around the world that Israel’s new prime
minister, Naftali Bennett, an avowed right-wing annexationist, somehow
represents a ‘kinder, gentler Israel than his predecessor, the coarse
provocateur Netanyahu,” says Ilene Cohen, who shared several of the links in this
piece with her email list.
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