Extreme Right in Netanyahu’s Government Won’t Dent Western Support
Israel is not suddenly a more racist state. It is
simply growing more confident about admitting its racism to the world
by Jonathan
Cook Posted on November 08, 2022
The most disturbing outcome of Israel’s general
election this week was not the fact that an openly fascist party
won the third-biggest tally of seats, or that it is about to become the
lynchpin of the next government. It is how little will change, in Israel or
abroad, as a result.
Having Religious Zionism at the heart of government
will alter the tone in which Israeli politics is conducted, making it even
coarser, more thuggish, and uncompromising. But it will make no difference to
the ethnic supremacism that has driven Israeli policy for decades.
Israel is not suddenly a more racist state.
It is simply growing more confident about admitting its racism to the world.
And the world – or at least the bit of it that arrogantly describes itself as
the international community – is about to confirm that such confidence is
well-founded.
Indeed, the West’s attitude towards Israel’s next
coalition government will be no different from its attitude towards the
supposedly less-tainted ones that preceded it.
In private, the Biden administration in the US has
made plain to Israeli leaders its displeasure at having fascist parties so
prominently in government, not least because their presence risks
highlighting Washington’s hypocrisy and embarrassing Gulf allies. But don’t
expect Washington to do anything tangible.
There will be no statements calling for the Israeli
government to be ostracized as a pariah, nor moves to sanction it or to end
the billions of dollars in handouts the US
provides every year. In a Washington still wracked by the fallout from the 6 January riots,
there will be no warnings that Israeli democracy has been sabotaged from
within.
Similarly, there will be no demands that Israel
commits to more rigorous protections for the Palestinians under
its military rule, and no revival of efforts to force it to the negotiating
table.
After a little embarrassed shuffling of feet, and
maybe a token refusal to meet with ministers from the fascist parties, it will
be business as usual – the “usual” being the oppression and ethnic cleansing of
Palestinians.
Dead and buried
None of this is to play down the significance of the
results. Meretz,
the only Jewish party that professes to favor peace over the rights of Israeli
settlers, appears to have failed to make it over the electoral threshold.
Israel’s tiny peace camp looks dead and buried.
The secular far-right, the settler far-right, and the
fundamentalist religious right have secured 70
of the parliament’s 120 seats, even if internecine feuds mean not all of them
are prepared to sit together. Enough will, however, to ensure that disgraced
former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu returns
to power for a record sixth time.
All but certain to be at the heart of the new
government is Itamar Ben-Gvir,
whose party represents the brutish, nakedly supremacist legacy of the notorious
Rabbi Meir Kahane, who wished
to expel Palestinians from their homeland. Netanyahu knows he owes his comeback
to the astonishing rise of Ben-Gvir and the Kahanists – and he will need to
suitably reward them.
Several dozen more seats in the Knesset are held by
Jewish parties that belong to the largely secular, militaristic right. Their
legislators reliably cheer on what now amounts to a 15-year siege of Gaza and
its two million Palestinian inhabitants, as well as the intermittent bombing of
the coastal enclave “back to the Stone Age.”
Neither the Jewish Party nor any of these parties prefer a
diplomatic solution over the permanent subjugation of Palestinians, their
gradual ethnic cleansing from Jerusalem, and the entrenchment of settlements in
the occupied West
Bank.
Those militaristic right parties who achieved victory
at the polls 19 months ago oversaw what the United Nations recently predicted to
be the “deadliest year” for Palestinians since it started compiling figures in
2005. While in government, they shut down six notable Palestinian human rights
groups, claiming without evidence that they were terrorist organizations.
Nonetheless, western capitals will now pretend that
these opposition parties offer the hope – however distant – of a peace
breakthrough.
Awash in this sea of unmitigated Jewish supremacism
will sit 10 legislators belonging
to two non-Zionist Arab-majority parties representing a fifth of Israel’s
population. If they can raise their voices loud enough to break through the
din of anti-Palestinian racism in the parliament chamber, they will be the only
ones advocating a cause the international community claims as dear to its
heart: a two-state solution.
Moment of clarity
The success of the coalition of Jewish Power and
Religious Zionism, which has won 14 seats,
should be a moment of clarity. In this election, political Zionism, Israel’s
state ideology, broke cover. It has revealed itself as a narrow spectrum of
ugly ethnic supremacist beliefs.
In particular, the ascent of Ben-Gvir and his party
will tear the mask off Israel and its supporters abroad, who claim that Israel
is the only democracy in
the Middle East, with the barely concealed implication that it represents an
outpost of western civilization in a morally backward, primitive Middle East.
Ben-Gvir and his allies in government make it only too
evident that western support for Israel was never conditional on its moral
character or its democratic pretensions. From the outset, Israel was sponsored
as a colonial outpost of the West – “a rampart of Europe against Asia, an
outpost of civilization as opposed to barbarism,” as Theodor Herzl, the father
of Zionism, termed the role of
the future Israel.
The central goal of Zionism, replacing the native
Palestinian population with Jewish incomers who claim an ancient birthright,
has been the same, whoever has led Israel. The dispute within Zionism has been
over the means necessary to achieve that replacement, based on concerns about
how outsiders might perceive and respond to Israel’s state-sponsored racism.
Over time, liberal Zionism has generally concluded
that the best it can hope for is to herd Palestinians into ghettoes to secure Jewish
dominion over the land. This is the apartheid model that
the international community tried for three decades to formalize into a
two-state solution.
But liberal Zionism failed to subjugate Palestinians and has now been effectively swept from Israel’s political scene by the triumph
of Revisionist Zionism. This is the ideology to which a clear majority of the
new parliament subscribes.
In the face of Palestinian resistance and
liberal Zionist failure, Revisionist Zionism offers a more satisfying solution.
It prefers to make explicit Jewish supremacy, divinely ordained or otherwise,
over an enlarged territory. It concludes that, if Palestinians refuse to submit
to their status as third-class guests, then they forfeit any rights and create
the grounds for their own expulsion.
Change within Israel
For Palestinians, Ben-Gvir will differ from
legislators in the other parties he will sit alongside in government chiefly in
terms of how boldly he will be prepared to embarrass the West – and Israel’s
liberal Zionist supporters – by flaunting what can fairly be described as
racist views.
Insofar as Ben-Gvir represents a change, it will not
be in terms of Israel’s actions in the occupied territories. They will continue
as before, though he may prove a thorn in Netanyahu’s side on the issue of annexation,
like many in Netanyahu’s own party.
Rather, Ben-Gvir’s impact will be inside Israel.
He wants the public security portfolio so
that he can begin turning the national police force into a militia in his own
image, replicating the settlers’ earlier success in penetrating and
gradually taking over the
Israeli military.
This will accelerate a trend of closer cooperation
between police and armed settler groups, legitimizing even greater use of
formal and informal types of violence against
the large minority of Palestinian citizens living inside Israel. It will also
allow Ben-Gvir and his allies to crack down on “deviants” within Jewish
society: those dissenting on religious, sexual, or political matters.
The fascist parties in Netanyahu’s future government
will seek to build on the existing insightful discourse against Palestinian
citizens living inside Israel to characterize the minority as a fifth column and to publicly justify its expulsion. And this is not unprecedented: previous
leaders and ministers have suggested that
Palestinians are inherently treasonous, comparing Palestinian citizens to
“cancer” or “cockroaches” and calling for their expulsion.
Meanwhile, Avigdor Lieberman, a minister in several
governments, long ago set out a plan for redrawing Israel’s
borders to deny parts of the Palestinian minority citizenship.
In the summer, Ben-Gvir touted an opinion poll showing
that nearly two-thirds of Israeli Jews favored legislation he proposed to expel
“disloyal” Palestinian citizens from the state and strip them of
citizenship. Other Jewish parties, subscribing to their own versions of ethnic
supremacism, will struggle to find a way to credibly counter Ben-Gvir’s
rhetoric.
Difficult test
All of this will prove a difficult test for Israel’s
supporters in Europe and the US. Most identify as liberal Zionists, even though
their wing of Zionism was eradicated inside Israel some time ago.
Jewish liberal Zionists invariably argue that Israel
is central to their identity.
They have even insisted on redefining anything but the bloodless criticism
of Israel as antisemitism. An attack on Israel is an attack on Jewish identity,
they argue, and therefore constitutes antisemitism.
It was precisely that logic that was reflected by the
International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) when it drafted a new definition of antisemitism –
one that has been widely adopted by western political parties, local
authorities, and universities.
The IHRA’s examples of
antisemitism include labeling Israel a “racist endeavor,” comparing its actions
to those of the Nazis (presumably even if real-life fascist parties are
dictating Israeli policies), or requiring of Israel “behavior not expected or
demanded of any other democratic nation” (begging the question: what more does
Israel have to do to stop qualifying as “any other democratic nation”?)
Those demurring, such as Britain’s former Labour
leader, Jeremy Corbyn,
have felt the full force of liberal Zionist wrath – as have those campaigning for
boycotts of Israel to curb its excesses. It was liberal Zionists who shut down
boycotts, divestment, and sanctions (BDS)
activism.
Will Israel’s supporters repudiate the IHRA definition
or Israel, when Ben-Gvir is sitting in government, representing a large chunk
of the Israeli population? You can bet they won’t.
If Ben-Gvir forces Israel’s cheerleaders to choose
between the ethnic supremacism of their Zionism and their liberalism, most will
stick with the former. What will happen, as has happened so many times before,
is that Israel’s shift further rightwards will quickly be normalized. Having
fascist parties inside the government will soon become unremarkable.
Worse, Ben-Gvir will serve as an alibi for the other
far-right politicians alongside him, allowing the US and Europe to present them
as moderates; men and women of peace, the adults in the room.
Jonathan Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special
Prize for Journalism. His latest books are Israel
and the Clash of Civilizations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle
East (Pluto Press) and Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s
Experiments in Human Despair (Zed Books). His website is www.jonathan-cook.net.
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