Netanyahu Unmasks
Israel
For years, U.S. politicians have rejected
allegations of Israeli racism and excused
mistreatment of the Palestinians as a
temporary necessity that would be fixed by a
two-state solution. But Israeli Prime
Minister Netanyahu has destroyed those
arguments in his panic to keep his job.
By Robert Parry
March 19, 2015 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - Desperate
to win reelection, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu stripped off Israel’s
mask and exposed the ugliness that has
deformed his country over the past several
decades. He abandoned the subterfuge of a
two-state solution, exposed the crass racism
that underlies Israeli politics, and
revealed Israel’s blatant control of the
U.S. Congress.
For
years, these realities were known to many
Americans, but – if they spoke up – they
were condemned as anti-Semites, so most
stayed silent to protect their careers and
reputations. But – given Netanyahu’s brazen
admissions – the American people may have
little choice but to finally take notice of
this troubling reality and demand a change
in U.S. policy.
The truth is that the
two-state solution has been a fiction for at
least the past two decades, dying in 1995
with the assassination of Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin. But the two-state illusion
still served important political purposes
both for Israelis, who would pay it lip
service while continuing their steady
encroachment on Palestinian lands, and for
U.S. politicians who could point to the
mirage as an excuse not to pressure Israel
too hard on its human rights violations.
Yet, whenever any U.S.
official actually tried to reach that
shimmering oasis of a two-state solution, it
would recede into the distance. Then, the
Israelis would rely on their friends and
allies in the news media and politics to
blame the Palestinians. Now, however, the
illusion of Israel seeking such an outcome
in good faith has been lost in Netanyahu’s
anything-goes determination to keep his
office – a case of political expediency
trumping strategic expediency.
In the closing days of the
campaign, Netanyahu promised that as long as
he was prime minister he would block a
Palestinian state and would continue
building Jewish settlements on what
international law recognizes as Palestinian
land.
To further rally his
right-wing Jewish base, Netanyahu warned
that “Arab voters are streaming in huge
quantities to the polling stations” – an
alarm similar to racist politicians in the
United States motivating the white vote with
claims about loads of blacks being bused to
the polls. With his crude appeal, Netanyahu
undermined the longstanding denial that
Zionism is a form of racism.
Even before Netanyahu’s
last-minute histrionics, he had exploited
his relationship with the United States
to burnish his reputation as a world leader
by appearing for a record-tying third time
as a foreign leader addressing a joint
session of the U.S. Congress. (Only Great
Britain’s Winston Churchill had appeared
three times before Congress.)
Acting as almost a
stand-in for the President of the United
States, Netanyahu gave what amounted to a
faux State of the Union address filled with
scary tales about Iran and with dire
warnings against international
negotiations seeking to ensure that Iran’s
nuclear program remains peaceful.
Though some Democrats
boycotted the speech because it represented
an unprecedented insult to an American
president, the Republican majority and many
Democrats gave Netanyahu more than 40
ovations as they cheered his vitriolic
attacks on Iran and his denunciations of the
negotiations supported by President Barack
Obama. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Congress
Cheers Netanyahu’s Hatred of Iran.”]
Bomb, Bomb, Bomb
Iran
Then, last weekend, a
prominent neoconservative Joshua Muravchik
admitted that the almost certain outcome
of Netanyahu’s scuttling of the negotiations
would be to bomb Iran. Muravchik laid out
this scenario in a Washington Post
article headlined “War is the
only way to stop Iran” in print editions and
“War with Iran is probably our best option”
online.
“What if force is the only
way to block Iran from gaining nuclear
weapons? That, in fact, is probably the
reality,” Muravchik wrote. “Sanctions may
have induced Iran to enter negotiations, but
they have not persuaded it to abandon its
quest for nuclear weapons. Nor would the
stiffer sanctions that Netanyahu advocates
bring a different result. …
“Does this mean that our
only option is war? Yes, although an air
campaign targeting Iran’s nuclear
infrastructure would entail less need for
boots on the ground than the war Obama is
waging against the Islamic State, which
poses far smaller a threat than Iran does. …
Wouldn’t destroying much of Iran’s nuclear
infrastructure merely delay its progress?
Perhaps, but we can strike as often as
necessary.”
In other words, if
Netanyahu keeps pulling the strings of the
U.S. government, an open-ended war on Iran
is the almost certain result. But Netanyahu,
for short-term political gain, risked
Israel’s longstanding support from the
American people by spotlighting his role as
the marionette of the U.S. Congress. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “A
Neocon Admits the Plan to Bomb Iran.“]
Netanyahu’s reelection
victory has clarified the situation for the
American people in another way. We now know
there will be no two-state solution with the
Palestinians as Israel cements its status as
an apartheid state – and all the cries of
“anti-Semitism” are not likely to silence
people taking notice of this reality since
the Israeli Prime Minister himself has taken
the sting out of the slur.
The American people now
have little choice but to recognize that
Israel intends to maintain and expand its
“Jewish state” pushing the Palestinians into
isolated enclaves. For nearly a half
century, Israel has exercised effective
control over these indigenous people in the
West Bank and Gaza (totaling more than 4
million people), but there was always the
hope of a Palestinian state.
Now, by jettisoning the
prospect of a “two-state solution,”
Netanyahu will institutionalize what had
long been the unacknowledged fate of the
Palestinians. In essence, Netanyahu is
opting for a one-state solution, just with
most Palestinians confined to a state-less
netherworld where they will be denied
political rights, left to wither and die.
And, whenever some
Palestinians act up, Israel will wage war
against them, killing thousands at a time
and destroying their homes and
infrastructure, what Israelis call “mowing
the grass.”
With the
facades gone, Americans must decide if they
will embrace this apartheid system or not.
Many Christian Zionists, who are a powerful
force inside the Republican Party, are okay
with Israel’s brutal repression because they
see the Jews taking this land as a step
toward fulfilling a biblical prophecy so
Jesus can return to earth as its king.
But rational Americans
are confronted with a difficult moral
choice. Either continue supporting Netanyahu
in brutalizing the Palestinians and in his
looming war against Iran (using the U.S.
military to carry it out) or insist that the
U.S. government reassess its relationship
with Israel.
The developments of March
2015 – from Netanyahu’s proconsul-style
speech before the U.S. Congress to the
racist incitements of his victorious
campaign – have forced thoughtful Americans
to abandon their longstanding excuses for
Israeli behavior.
From now on, there’s no
pretending that “standing with Israel”
doesn’t mean kneeling in an obsequious
acceptance of Netanyahu’s cruelty toward the
Palestinians and cooperation in an illegal
and aggressive war against Iran.
Investigative reporter Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories
for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the
1980s. You can buy his latest book,
America’s Stolen
Narrative, either in print
here or
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