Shocked by
Donald Trump's 'Travel Ban'? Israel Has Had a Similar
Policy for Decades
An Israeli official admitted in 2010 that the
Separation Wall was 'built for political and demographic
reasons', while the man who designed it revealed how
'the main thing the government told me in giving me the
job was to include as many Israelis inside the fence and
leave as many Palestinians outside'
By Ben White
February 03, 2017
"Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Independent" -
In
US President Donald Trump’s first week in office, three
policy issues dominated the headlines: his plans to
build a wall on the Mexican border, the President’s
support for torture, and his
executive order targeting refugees, residents and
visitors from seven Muslim majority countries.
All three have
prompted widespread outrage, in particular, the ban on
refugees and blanket immigration restrictions being
applied on the basis of national origin and religion.
British Prime
Minister
Theresa May, however, only issued a reluctant and
mealy mouthed criticism of Trump’s scorched-earth
approach to his first few days in the White House. May
is one of only a handful of world leaders seemingly
eager to position themselves at Trump’s right hand side.
One other
leader, however, has gone even further than the
British PM in seeking to praise Trump, both before
and since his inauguration – and that’s Israeli premier
Benjamin Netanyahu. There are a few reasons for this,
including the tacit approval a Trump administration is
expected to give to the settlement expansion
bonanza already underway.
But there’s
another element at play here, which goes deeper than
Netanyahu’s political agenda. For what many do not
realise, is that the policies – and their undergirding
ideology – that Trump is unleashing on the US have been
pursued by the state of Israel for decades.
First, let’s
take the wall. Israel began the construction of its
Separation Wall in the occupied Palestinian
territory (OPT) almost fifteen years ago. Justified in
the name of “security”, some 85 percent of the wall’s
route is built inside the OPT, to incorporate illegal
West Bank settlements.
It was on that
basis that, in 2004, judges at the International Court
of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague deemed the wall illegal,
and called for its immediate dismantling.
Israel’s Wall
is not even the security miracle that its defenders
claim. None other than Israel’s own security services
attributed a sharp decrease in “terror attacks” in
2005 to the “truce” unilaterally adopted by Hamas.
Tens of thousands of Palestinian workers without
permits enter Israel every day, with some
200 miles of “gaps” in the Wall’s route remaining.
The real link
to Trump’s ideas comes in the justification of Israel’s
Wall on “demographic” grounds; in other words, keeping
Palestinians out because they are Palestinians – and
note that the
idea of a wall aimed at “separation” actually
pre-dates the Second Intifada.
An Israeli
official
admitted in 2010 that the Wall was “built for
political and demographic reasons”, while the man who
designed it revealed how “the main thing the government
told me in giving me the job was to include as many
Israelis inside the fence and leave as many Palestinians
outside.”
Then there’s
torture. Trump’s unabashed endorsement of torture has
horrified politicians, human rights activists and
former prisoners alike. In Israel, however, the torture
of prisoners is routine – and rubber-stamped by not just
the state, but also by Israel’s
Supreme Court.
Just last week,
Israeli interrogators
confirmed in Haaretz
some of the methods used on detainees – including
physical and psychological abuse. The revelations came
as
no surprise to Palestinians, nor those Israelis who
have documented practices such as
sexual torture.
This grim
reality is also well-known to international human rights
groups – Amnesty’s most recent annual report
described how “Israeli military and police forces,
as well as Israel Security Agency (ISA) personnel,
tortured and otherwise ill-treated Palestinian
detainees, including children.”
“Methods
included beating with batons, slapping, throttling,
prolonged shackling, stress positions, sleep deprivation
and threats”, Amnesty added, further noting how despite
almost 1,000 complaints since 2001, the authorities have
not opened a single criminal investigation.
And finally,
what about immigration? As horrendous as Trump’s orders
have been, thus far they pale in comparison in scale and
duration to what Israel has been implementing for some
seven decades.
Since 1948
Israel has enforced a “Palestinian Ban” (Muslims and
Christians), designed to ensure that no refugees can
return to the lands and homes from which they were
expelled. In parallel, the state’s borders are
open for any Jewish person, from anywhere in the world.
Not only that,
but in more recent times, Israel has also passed
legislation – backed again by the Supreme Court – that
prevents Palestinians with Israeli citizenship
from family reunification – purely “on the basis of the
ethnicity or national belonging of their spouse.”
Former Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon
said of the law: “There is no need to hide behind
security arguments. There is a need for the existence of
a Jewish state.” Trump – and the likes of Steve Bannon –
would approve. Just as they would, no doubt, of the fact
that Israel approved just eight requests for asylum, out
of 7,218 requests
filed by Eritreans from 2009 to 2016.
Writing in
+972 Magazine, Edo Konrad noted the double
standards of those who condemn Trump, but who back
institutionalised racism in Israel. Here in Britain too,
Trump’s critics include
those who justify, or ignore, Israel’s own toxic mix
of walls, discriminatory immigration system and torture.
This dissonance
is only likely to become more publicly uncomfortable for
Israel’s friends in the West. For Netanyahu’s embrace of
a Trump White House is not just political manoeuvrings –
it is reflective of a disturbing reality with which the
Palestinians are only too familiar.
The views
expressed in this article are solely those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
Information Clearing House. |