Is Ben-Gvir Preparing a Holy War Against the Palestinians?
by Jonathan
Cook Posted on January 09, 2023
Israel’s new
national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir,
lost no time in demonstrating who is boss. On Tuesday, days after Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government was sworn in,
the ultra-nationalist politician marched straight in to the Al-Aqsa Mosque complex
in the occupied Old City of Jerusalem – probably the most incendiary site in
the Middle East.
Ben-Gvir did so despite reports that he had agreed
with Netanyahu to delay such a visit for
fear of the potentially explosive consequences.
But who will hold him to account for playing with
fire? A prime minister who desperately needs Ben-Gvir’s support to stay in
power so that Netanyahu can legislate an end to his corruption trial and
keep himself out of jail? Or the Israeli police force that Ben-Gvir himself now
has unprecedented control over?
The leader of the fascist Jewish Power party used the
visit to indicate both to his followers and to Netanyahu that he answers to no
one, and that he will not compromise on his own extreme ideology of Jewish
supremacism.
The visit sent another message too: Ben-Gvir appears
ready to provoke a religious war – one that would demonstrate once and for all
the power of his kind of Jewish zealotry and thuggishness to subdue all Muslim
opposition. Al-Aqsa could be the powder-keg to ignite such
a conflagration.
Ben-Gvir’s visit has passed, at least so far, without
a significant Palestinian backlash,
although Hamas had reportedly warned beforehand that it would not “sit idly
by”, threatening “explosive
violence”.
Ben-Gvir was testing the waters. He will surely be
back soon, with bigger provocations. Both during and after Israel’s recent
general election campaign, he called for Jews to be able to pray at the Muslim
holy site, and has said he will demand that
Netanyahu institute what he terms “equal rights for
Jews” there.
Diplomatic protest
The fear of what Ben-Gvir may do next, unless
Netanyahu reins him in, was part of the reason his visit triggered such a storm
of diplomatic protest. Jordan,
which has formal custodianship of the holy site, called in Israel’s ambassador
for a dressing down,
while the US, Israel’s
patron, roused itself to describe the
visit as “unacceptable”. The UAE postponed
Netanyahu’s forthcoming visit.
Ben-Gvir will be delighted at such ineffectual
reprimands. The precedent he was drawing on was the visit to
Al-Aqsa in September 2000 of then-opposition leader Ariel Sharon backed
by 1,000 members of
Israel’s security forces, over the opposition of
the Jerusalem police.
That incursion triggered a Palestinian uprising,
the Second Intifada,
justifying years of crushing Israeli military repression. Israel used tanks
to confine the
then Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat, to his Ramallah headquarters, while the
Israeli army emasculated the Palestinian Authority (PA), effectively reversing
the promise of self-rule implicit in the Oslo Accords.
Palestinian society was gradually bled of the ability and will to sustain an
uprising that cost thousands of lives.
Ben-Gvir might be angling to provoke a similar
confrontation to provide a pretext for finishing off what’s left of the PA.
There could be a domestic political bonus too: Sharon rode the wave of Jewish
nationalism he unleashed right into the prime minister’s office. The Israeli
public wanted an uncompromising general and Jewish patriot to pound the
Palestinian people into submission.
Already buoyed by a renewed wave of Jewish chauvinism,
along with the political legitimacy Netanyahu has conferred on him by ushering
his party into government, Ben-Gvir might be hoping to see that scenario play
out again.
Rival nationalisms
Israeli media, Arab states and western diplomats have
all framed Ben-Gvir’s visit as threatening what is known as the “status quo”: a
set of principles agreed in the 19th century, and renewed after Israel’s
occupation of Jerusalem in 1967, to enshrine Muslim
sovereignty over the mosque complex and Muslim authorities’ power to regulate
access and worship.
The truth, however, is that Israel has been whittling
away the status quo at an ever-faster pace since Sharon’s visit. That was why
the Israeli general’s incursion sparked an explosion from Palestinians two
decades ago, while Ben-Gvir’s, so far at least, has not. Violations of
the status quo by
extremist Israeli politicians are no longer quite so out of the ordinary.
Perhaps more than any other Israeli leader of his
time, Sharon appreciated the degree to which Al-Aqsa had become the symbolic,
beating heart of a power play between rival Israeli and Palestinian
nationalisms. Encouraging the distinction between national and religious
sentiment to be blurred, as he did at Al-Aqsa, helped to unify an Israeli
society deeply divided by questions of religion.
Ownership of the mosque complex – or Temple Mount, as
Israeli Jews call it, referring to two ancient Jewish temples that supposedly
lie beneath the plaza – was seen as the natural corollary, and confirmation, of
Jewish title to the land. Or as Sharon put it at
the time, the holy site was “the basis of the existence of the Jewish people,
and I am not afraid of riots by the Palestinians”.
It was how the ultra-nationalist, secular Sharon
redefined the conflict. He made an assertion of Jewish sovereignty over the
plaza a prerequisite for any Israeli politician vying for power. After he
became prime minister, and in the midst of the Second Intifada, Sharon in 2003
unilaterally enforced access for
Jews and other non-Muslims to the site, over the opposition of the waqf, the
Muslim religious authorities at Al-Aqsa.
Today, little of the status quo agreement survives.
Israeli occupation forces
exclusively determine who gets entry to Al-Aqsa. Muslim worship can be limited
whenever Israel decides. Palestinians from Gaza, trapped in
their enclave by fences and watchtowers, are permanently excluded from the holy
site.
Meanwhile, Israeli soldiers in military fatigues, and
religious Jews and settlers, have ready access – and they often use their
visits to pray, in stark contravention of
the status quo. Increasingly, Israeli security forces storm
the mosque at will; such an incident in May 2021 contributed to
weeks of violence across the occupied territories and inside Israel.
Master-serf relations
Like Sharon, Ben-Gvir views Al-Aqsa as a supreme
nationalist cause. One of his legislators, Zvika Fogel, a former Israeli
military commander in charge of Gaza, set out Ben-Gvir’s goal, suggesting
it could be achieved without
a Palestinian backlash: “We shouldn’t treat his visit as something that will
lead to an escalation. Why not see it as part of realizing our [Jewish]
sovereignty?”
Yet, faced with a weakened Netanyahu, Ben-Gvir must be
hoping to push Sharon’s policy still further – not only asserting a principle
of Jewish ownership of the holy site, but also entrenching the physical reality
of absolute Jewish control.
This would include prioritizing Jewish worship, as now
happens in Hebron at the Ibrahimi Mosque.
It is a model that the settlers who follow Ben-Gvir want repeated at Al-Aqsa,
and it also implies the physical partition of Al-Aqsa plaza, mirroring the
reality in Hebron.
Such ambitions replicate at al-Aqsa the master-serf
relationship that Israel has developed in the occupied territories of the West
Bank and East Jerusalem. Should Jewish rule over the plaza be contested, the
Israeli government could then punish Muslims and ban access, with state police
– now under Ben-Gvir’s control – empowered to break into the mosque or any
other site on the plaza whenever they deem necessary.
But it does not end there. Like his supporters,
Ben-Gvir wants to destroy the Muslim holy site and restore it as a Jewish
temple. He said as much last May when he visited the Al-Aqsa complex, posting a
picture calling for
the eradication of the mosque to “establish a synagogue on the mount”.
‘The last war’
For the time being, Ben-Gvir appears to be using his
party’s legislators as his mouthpiece, so as not to jeopardize his coalition
agreement with Netanyahu. After Tuesday’s visit, Fogel relished the prospect of
Hamas retaliating with rocket fire out of Gaza. He said such
a showdown “would be worth it because this will be the last war – and after
that we can sit and raise doves and all the other beautiful birds that exist”.
Ben-Gvir does not need to set the fire directly at
Al-Aqsa. With Israel’s police forces under his command, and with his political
ally Bezalel Smotrich in charge of managing the occupation, he has a whole
armory of other ways, particularly in Jerusalem, to inflame the Palestinian
population.
Trigger-happy police killings of civilians, settlement
expansion, house demolitions, and the building of a cable car route
through occupied East Jerusalem to bring Jewish tourists to the foot of Al-Aqsa
all have the potential to fire up tensions. Ben-Gvir can also make the lives of
Palestinian security prisoners even more miserable, as he promised to
do during the elections, provoking hunger strikes.
Palestinian anger often finds its outlet at Al-Aqsa
because of the holy site’s role as a religious and nationalist symbol,
particularly for a people denied any other symbols of nationhood.
Ben-Gvir’s closest political allies in the Temple
Mount movement are already setting their sights on Passover in April, which
this year coincides with the middle of Ramadan. They have appealed to the police,
as they do every year,
to allow them to carry out provocative rituals, such as animal sacrifice,
associated with the construction of a Jewish temple in place of Al-Aqsa Mosque.
Each year, police try to stop them;
but this year, Ben-Gvir will be dictating police policy.
Scholar Tomer Persico, a keen observer of Ben-Gvir’s
Kahanist roots, notes that in a 2019 interview, the Jewish Power leader argued that
the “big difference” between him and his mentor, extremist Rabbi Meir Kahane,
was that “they give us a microphone”, while Kahane was shunned by the Israeli
political establishment.
That was three years ago. Ben-Gvir has rapidly become
the new mainstream in Israel. Today, with his ministerial powers and a national
platform to amplify his incitement, it is only a matter of time before he sets
things alight.
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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