Reassessing U.S. Aid to Israel
By Allan C. Brownfeld
May 21, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "CDN"
- The new Israeli government is taking an extreme stance regarding a
possible Palestinian state. Prime Minister Netanyahu, during his campaign
for re-election, said that a Palestinian state would never be established
while he was in power.Those in Israel and in the
American Jewish community who seek peace with the Palestinians and want
Israel to represent democratic values, as well as the moral and ethical
Jewish tradition, now believe that the majority of Israeli voters have
turned their backs on both.
In the new government, what Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor
of Tikkun, calls “the overtly racist party, HaBayit Hayehudi (Jewish Home),”
will control the justice department, the education department and almost all
important government offices concerned with the occupation of the West Bank.
The new justice minister, Ayelet Shaked, who promises to
limit the role of the Supreme Court, became notorious for justifying the
burning alive of a Palestinian teenager by Israeli youths in East Jerusalem.
She published on Facebook what Rabbi Lerner termed “in effect, genocide for
Palestinians.” The posting declared that “the entire Palestinian people are
the enemy” and justified its destruction, “including the elderly and its
women, its cities and its villages, its property and its infrastructure.”
She also called for the slaughter of Palestinian mothers who give birth to
“little snakes.”
Nachman Shai, a member of Knesset from the Zionist Union,
said giving Shaked the Justice ministry “would be like appointing a
pyromaniac to head the fire department.” But Shaked is hardly alone.
The new government is filled with like-minded men and
women. Rabbi Eli Ben-Dahan, the new deputy defense minister, responsible
for the army’s “civil administration,” on Aug. 1, 2013. declared:
“(Palestinians) are beasts, they are not humans.” On Dec. 27, 2013, he said:
“A Jew always has a much higher soul than a gentile, even if he is a
homosexual.” The deal between Netanyahu and the Jewish Home party was
negotiated by Ze’ev Elkin, a West Bank settler and Knesset chair of the
foreign affairs and defense committees. He is a member of Netanyahu’s own
Likud party and supports annexation of the West Bank into Israel. Like
Netanyahu, he rejects any form of Palestinian sovereignty.
Also part of the new government are two ultra-Orthodox
parties, United Torah Judaism and Shas. They favor expanding settlements on
the West Bank, reject any form of Palestinian sovereignty and oppose any
liberalization of Israel’s theocratic government. Non-Orthodox Jews have
less religious freedom in Israel than any place in the Western world. Israel
has no civil marriage. Jews and non-Jews cannot marry. Reform, Conservative
and Reconstructionist rabbis have no right to perform weddings, funerals or
conversions.
Discussing the new government in the Israeli newspaper
Ha’aretz (May 10, 2015), Gideon Levy writes: “The 34th government will
deserve Israel: Israel will deserve the 34th government. This is an
authentic and representative government, the true manifestation of the
spirit of the times and the deepest feelings of most Israelis. It will be a
true government without pretense…They won’t talk haughtily and they won’t
spout hollow slogans. Not about peace and not about human rights; not about
international law, justice or equality.”
Instead, declares Levy, “The truth will be thrust in the
faces of Israelis and the world. And the truth is this: The two-state
solution is dead (it was never born), the Palestinian state will not arise,
international law does not apply to Israel, the occupation will continue to
crawl quickly toward annexation, annexation will continue to crawl toward an
apartheid state; ‘Jewish’ supersedes ‘democratic,’ nationalism and racism
will get the government stamp of approval, but they’re already here and have
been for a long time.”
Discussing the election results, Professor David Shulman
of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem reports, “the Israeli electorate is
still dominated by hyper nationalist, in some cases proto fascist, figures.
It is in no way inclined to make peace. It has given a clear mandate for
policies that preclude any possibility of moving toward a settlement and
that will further deepen Israel’s colonial venture in the Palestinian
territories, probably irreversibly.”
Beyond this, argues Shulman, “I think that deeper currents
are also at work…for example, the ongoing, ultimately futile effort to
squeeze Jewish civilization, in its tremendous variability and imaginative
range, into the Procrustean confines of the modern nation-state with its
flag and postage stamps and proclivity to violence. Modern nationalism
always makes a distorted, very limited selection of the available cultural
repertoire, flattening out the potential richness; fanatical atavistic
forces tend to take the place of what has been lost…Netanyahu was actually
speaking the truth, a popular truth among his traditional supporters. He
explicitly renounced his pro forma acceptance of the notion of a two state
solution…He made it clear Israel would make no further territorial
concessions anywhere…Israel has, in effect, knowingly moved further toward a
full-fledged apartheid system. Those who don’t like the word can suggest
another one for what I see each week in the territories and more and more
inside the Green Line.”
More and more American Jews are expressing concern about
the support for Israel’s occupation policies by many American Jewish
organizations. The late Professor Tony Judt of New York University, an
active Zionist in his youth, says such support has eroded Judaism’s moral
integrity.
He argued that, *If there is one cast-iron law of history,
it is probably that occupations and other forms of colonial rule are sooner
of later resisted, and when that point comes, the occupier has a
straightforward choice between leaving and allowing the native population to
exercise its independence and self-determination—or staying. When the time
came, Israel made the disastrous decision to stay. The rest was
predictable.”
When it comes to those who blindly support whatever
Israeli governments have chosen to do, Judt asked, “How…does a reputably
intelligent people, with traditionally strong humanistic values, manage
constantly to delude itself about what is going on, what lies in store and
what needs to be done? And how has it allowed the Jewish Star of David, and
by implication, the Jewish religion and Jewish people, to become associated
in the eyes of growing numbers of people with repression?”
All Americans, regardless of their religion, are
implicated in Israel’s occupation of the West Bank. America is, after all,
helping to finance it. Israel is the largest recipient of U.S. taxpayer
dollars in our history. From 1949 to 2008, the U.S. government provided
Israel more than $103.6 billion of total official aid, making it the largest
recipient of U.S. foreign assistance in the post-World War II era. In 2007,
the two countries signed a memorandum of understanding providing for $30
billion of U.S. military aid from 2009 to 2018. Between fiscal years 2000
and 2009, the U.S. gave Israel $24.1 billion of military aid. With this
taxpayer money, the U.S. licensed, paid for and delivered more than 670
million weapons and related equipment to Israel, including almost 500
categories of weapons.
The U.S. has, under both Republicans and Democrats,
supported a two-state solution. Under both Republicans and Democrats, the
United States has viewed the occupation of the West Bank as in violation of
international law.
Israel now has a government that rejects the establishment
of a Palestinian state, supports expanded settlements and looks forward to
outright annexation. Its ministers include unequivocal racists who have
supported virtual genocide for the Palestinian people.
Under what rationale can continued massive U.S. aid be
justified? If ever there was a time to reassess our relationship with
Israel, clearly that time is now.