By Peter Beinart
November 24/25, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - The Trump administration said Israeli
settlements in the West Bank
don’t violate international law. That’s absurd.
Among international lawyers, the consensus that
settlements are illegal rivals the consensus among
international scientists that humans contribute to
climate change. As UCLA’s Dov Waxman has pointed
out, the legal advisor to Israel’s own foreign
ministry
admitted that “civilian settlement in the
administered territories contravenes explicit
provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention” after
Israel conquered the West Bank in 1967.
But
critics who condemn the Trump administration for
disregarding international law are missing the
deeper point. So are critics who condemn it for
undermining the two-state solution.
Fundamentally, the problem with settlements is
neither legal nor geopolitical. It is moral. Israeli
settlements in the West Bank are institutionalized
expressions of bigotry. The American and Israeli
politicians who legitimize them are the moral
equivalent of those politicians who legitimized Jim
Crow. It’s time they be treated as such.
Settlements only exist because Jews and
Palestinians in the West Bank live under a different
law. Jews are Israeli citizens: They can vote for
the government that controls every square inch of
the West Bank. Palestinians are Israeli subjects:
Permanently barred because of their ethnicity and
religion from citizenship in the country in which
they live. (Yes, Palestinians have at times voted
for the Palestinian Authority. But the PA is not a
government; it is Israel’s subcontractor. PA
officials — like all West Bank Palestinians — need
Israeli permission to travel from one part of the
West Bank to another).
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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Because the Israeli government controls the West
Bank, and because it is accountable to the Jews —
but not the Palestinians — who live there, it has
spent the last half-century seizing land on which
Palestinians live and giving it to Jews. Employing
an 1858
Ottoman law, it has declared much of the West
Bank “state land” and then transferred that
supposedly ownerless territory to Jewish
settlements. According to data from Israel’s own
civil administration,
almost 40% of the land on which settlements
reside was once owned by individual Palestinians.
Big deal, some settlement defenders argue: Lots
of people live on stolen land. If a community built
on land seized by force is morally illegitimate,
then the New Yorkers who live on territory once
owned by Native Americans have no more right to be
there than the Jewish settlers in Beit El.
But there’s a difference: New York is now open to
people of any religion or race. Native Amerians, as
citizens of the United States, can live there.
Palestinians can’t live in Beit El. Jewish
settlements are Jewish-only settlements. The West
Bank isn’t like New York in 2019. It’s like
Mississippi in 1959. It is a territory segregated by
law, separate and hideously unequal.
That’s what Benjamin Netanyahu obscures when he
tweets that the Trump administration’s new
settlements policy “reflects an historical truth -
that the Jewish people are not foreign colonialists
in Judea and Samaria.”
Of course, Jews are not foreign to the West Bank.
Much of the Book of Genesis takes place there; there
were Jewish communities in the West Bank before
Israel’s creation. But morally, the issue is not
whether Jews have the right to live in the West
Bank. It’s whether Jews have the right to live there
under a different law than their Palestinian
neighbors.
Do they have the right to bar Palestinians from
their communities? Do they have the right to expand
those communities onto land the Israeli government
keeps expropriating from Palestinian owners? Do they
have the right to operate swimming pools and complex
irrigation systems while their Palestinian neighbors
suffer from what the Israeli human rights group
B’Tselem has called “a
constant shortage of water.”
The injustices are not incidental to the
settlement project. Without them, settlements as
currently constituted could not exist. So when
Netanyahu defends settlements, he’s not defending
Jews’ right to live in the West Bank. He’s defending
our right to live there as masters.
Spend even a few hours on the ground with
Palestinians in the West Bank and all this becomes
obvious. But it rarely comes through in the American
media, which often describes settlements in the
bloodless language of geopolitics and international
law.
In its report on the Trump administration’s
decision, the New York Times emphasized that
previous American governments considered settlements
“inconsistent
with international law.” The Washington noted
that they’re often deemed “a
major obstacle to settling the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.”
But the core problem with Jim Crow was not that
it violated international legal norms, nor that it
posed an obstacle to settling conflicts between
whites and blacks. The core problem was that it
violated the principle of human equality.
“If giving some people liberty while denying it
to others because of their race, ethnicity or
religion was wrong in the segregated South, why
isn’t it wrong in the West Bank?” No American
television network should interview Benjamin
Netanyahu, Ron Dermer, David Friedman or Mike Pompeo
without asking some version of that question.
Every American politician who defends settlements
should be required to explain why he isn’t a
modern-day George Wallace. The word that’s missing
from most mainstream American discussion of
settlements is “bigotry.” People who care about
freedom must make it impossible to avoid.
Peter Beinart is a Forward columnist and
professor of journalism and political science at the
City University of New York. He is also a
contributor to The Atlantic and a CNN commentator.
Follow him on Twitter @PeterBeinart.
This article was originally published by "The
Forward" - -
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