December 27,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Israel’s Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is very,
very cross about last Friday’s United Nations Security
Council resolution condemning the creation of illegal
Jewish settlements all over the occupied West Bank and
in East Jerusalem.
He called in
the ambassadors of all the Western countries that voted
for the resolution to tell them off: Britain, France,
Spain, even New Zealand. He also had the US ambassador
on the carpet, although Washington merely abstained in
the Security Council vote. But, Netanyahu said, Donald
Trump’s incoming administration has promised to fight
“an all-out war” against the resolution.
The resolution
is only words, of course, but they are words that have
not found their way into any UN Security Council
resolution since 1979, because the United States always
used its veto to kill any resolution that contained
them. Words that describe the settlements as having “no
legal validity” and constituting a “flagrant violation
under international law and a major obstacle to the
achievement of the two-state solution.”
This is a
restatement of a truth that was once almost universally
accepted even in Israel. When Israel’s astonishing
victory in the 1967 war put the entire remaining area
that had been granted to the Palestinians by the UN
partition agreement of 1948 under Israeli control, most
Israelis initially saw it as an opportunity for peace.
Israel now had
a powerful bargaining card. If the Arabs wanted their
lost territories back, they would have to sign peace
treaties with Israel – and probably agree to
demilitarise those territories into the bargain.
To a generation
of Israelis who had lived in permanent, existential fear
of losing a war, that looked like a good bargain. But
even then a minority of Israelis wanted to keep the
conquered territories forever and repopulate them with
Jewish settlers.
The settler
movement began slowly: 15 years after the conquest there
were still only 100,000 Jews living in the occupied
territories, but the number had doubled to 200,000 by
1990, and doubled again to 400,000 by 2002. It is now at
least 600,000, and may be as high as 750,000.
If the settler
population continues to grow at the current rate, there
could be as many as a million Jews in the occupied
territories by 2030. At that point, the long-term
prospect of a Jewish majority heaves above the horizon.
And that is what the current confrontation between
President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu is really about.
Netanyahu
avoids any actual peace talks with the Palestinians
because a peace deal (if it could be achieved) would
mean the end of the settlement project. He can’t say
that out loud, of course, but it is the openly expressed
view of the settler leaders whose support has been
essential to Netanyahu’s various coalition governments.
This is why
Netanyahu has to lie all the time, and it drives Obama
crazy. In a conversation caught on an open mike in 2011,
France’s then-president Nicolas Sarkozy told Obama: “I
can't stand him (Netanyahu). He's a liar.” And Obama
replied, "You're tired of him? What about me? I have to
deal with him every day.”
But Obama’s
decision to abstain on the Security Council vote
condemning Israeli settlement policy in the Palestinian
occupied territories was not just a childish last slap
at Netanyahu. Obama has a fundamentally different view
of what constitutes long-term security for Israel – one
that he shares with most other outside observers, but a
shrinking proportion of Israelis.
Long-term does
mean long-term. It cannot be assumed that Arab states
will always be relatively poor and incompetently led,
and that Israel will always be the unchallengeable
military superpower of the region. So, in the view of
Obama and other outsiders, Israel’s long-term security
still depends on making a fair and lasting peace with
its Arab neighbours – including the Palestinians.
The settlements
fatally undermine the prospects for such a deal. For a
growing number of Israelis, that is irrelevant, because
they have a fundamentally demonic view of the Arabs and
do not believe that a lasting peace with them is
possible. In which case, of course, Israel might as well
grab all of East Jerusalem and the West Bank.
The Jewish
settlements are indeed illegal under the Fourth Geneva
Convention, and there is not a single government outside
Israel that believes they are legitimate. But the recent
Security Council resolution will have no effect on
Israeli policy, nor will the state of Israel suffer
grave consequences as a result.
President-elect
Donald Trump will stop any further such resolutions with
the US veto, although he is unlikely to be able to undo
this one. And we will all have to wait a long time to
know whether it is the perspective of Netanyahu and
Trump, or that of Obama and almost all other world
leaders, that ultimately defines Israel’s future.
Gwynne Dyer,
OC is a London-based independent Canadian journalist,
syndicated columnist and military historian.
Did Obama Orchestrate UNSC Anti Settlement Resolution?
(video)
Along his presidential campaign, President-Elect
Donald Trump promised to 'make America great
again.' For some peculiar reason, the Israelis
already know that they have him in their pocket.
Is it true? Is this really Trump's vision of
American greatness, keeping America a
subservient Israeli colony? Soon enough we will
be able to answer this question.
It is unacceptable to slander, smear or engage in personal attacks on authors of articles posted on ICH.
Those engaging in that behavior will be banned from the comment section.
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)