Divide and Rule
By Uri Avnery
August 11, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Binyamin Netanyahu is not known as a classical scholar, but even so
he has adopted the Roman maxim Divide et Impera, divide and rule.
The main (and perhaps only) goal of his policy is to
extend the rule of Israel, as the "Nation-State of the Jewish
People", over all of Eretz Israel, the historical land of Palestine.
This means ruling all of the West Bank and covering it with Jewish
settlements, while denying any civil rights to its 2.5 million plus
Arab inhabitants.
East Jerusalem, with its 300,000 Arab inhabitants,
has already been formally annexed to Israel, without granting them
Israeli citizenship or the right to take part in Knesset elections.
That leaves the Gaza Strip, a tiny enclave with
1.8 million plus Arab inhabitants, most of them descendants of
refugees from Israel. The last thing in the world Netanyahu wants is
to include these, too, in the Israeli imperium.
There is a historical precedent. After the 1956
Sinai War, when President Eisenhower demanded that Israel
immediately return all the Egyptian territory it had conquered, many
voices in Israel called for the annexation of the Gaza Strip to
Israel. David Ben-Gurion adamantly refused. He did not want hundreds
of thousands more Arabs in Israel. So he gave the strip too back to
Egypt.
The annexation of Gaza, while keeping the West
Bank, would create an Arab majority in the Jewish State. True, a
small majority, but a rapidly growing one.
The inhabitants of the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip belong to the same Palestinian people. They are closely
connected by national identity and family ties. But they are now
separate entities, geographically divided by Israeli territory,
which at its narrowest point is about 30 miles broad.
Both territories were occupied by Israel in the
1967 Six-day War. But for many years, Palestinians could move freely
from one to the other. Palestinians from Gaza could study in the
university of Bir Zeit in the West Bank, a woman from Ramallah in
the West Bank could marry a man from Beth Hanun in the Gaza strip.
Ironically, this freedom of movement came to an
end with the 1994 Oslo "peace" agreement, in which Israel explicitly
recognized the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as one single territory,
and undertook to open four "free passages" between them. Not a
single one was ever opened.
The West Bank is now nominally administered by the
Palestinian Authority, also created by the Oslo agreement, which is
recognized by the UN and the majority of the world’s nations as the
State of Palestine under Israeli military occupation. Its leader,
Mahmoud Abbas, a close colleague of the late Yasser Arafat, is
committed to the Arab Peace plan, initiated by Saudi Arabia, which
recognizes the State of Israel in its pre-1967 borders. No one
doubts that he desires peace, based on the Two-State Solution.
In 2006, general elections in both territories
were won by Hamas (Arab initials of "Movement of Islamic
Resistance"). Under Israeli pressure, the results were annulled.
Whereupon Hamas took control of the Gaza Strip. That’s where we are
now: two separate Palestinian entities, whose rulers hate each
other.
Superficial logic would dictate that the Israeli
government support Mahmoud Abbas, who is committed to peace, and
help him against Hamas, which at least officially is committed to
the destruction of Israel. Well, it ain’t necessarily so.
True, Israel has fought several wars against the
Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip, but it has made no effort to occupy it
again, after withdrawing from it in 2005. Netanyahu, like Ben-Gurion
before him, does not want to have all those Arabs. He contents
himself with a blockade that turns it into "the world’s largest
open-air prison".
Yet, a year after the last Israel-Gaza war, the
region is rife with rumors about indirect negotiations going on in
secret between Israel and Gaza about a long-range armistice (‘hudna"
in Arabic), even bordering on unofficial peace.
How come? Peace with the radical enemy regime in
Gaza, while opposing the peace-oriented Palestinian Authority in the
West Bank?
Sounds crazy, but actually isn’t. For Netanyahu,
Mahmoud Abbas is the greater enemy. He attracts international
sympathy, the UN and most of the world’s governments recognize his
State of Palestine, he may well be on the way to establish a real
independent Palestinian state, including Gaza.
No such danger emanates from the Hamas mini-state
in Gaza. It is detested throughout the world, even by most of the
Arab states, as a "terrorist" mini-state.
Simple pragmatic logic would push Israel towards
Hamas. The tiny enclave does not present a real danger to the mighty
Israeli military machine, at most a small irritation that can be
dealt with by a small military operation every few years, as
happened during the last few years.
It would be logical for Netanyahu to make
unofficial peace with the regime in Gaza and continue the fight
against the regime in Ramallah. Why maintain the naval blockade on
the Gaza strip? Why not do the opposite? Let the Gazans build a
deep-sea harbor, and rebuild their beautiful international airport
(which was destroyed by Israel)? It would be easy to put in place an
inspection regime to prevent the smuggling in of arms.
Once there was talk of Gaza turning into an Arab
Singapore. That is a wild exaggeration, but the Gaza Strip may well
become a rich oasis of trade, a harbor of entry for the West Bank,
Jordan and beyond.
This would dwarf the PLO regime in the West Bank,
deprive it of its international standing and avert the danger of
peace. The annexation of the West Bank – now called "Judea and
Samaria" even by Israeli leftists – could proceed step by step,
first unofficially, then officially. Jewish settlements would cover
the land more and more, and in the end nothing else would remain
there except some small Palestinian enclaves. Palestinians would be
encouraged to leave.
Fortunately (for the Palestinians) such logical
thinking is alien to Netanyahu and his cohorts. Faced with two
alternatives to choose from, he chooses neither.
While seeking an unofficial hudna with Hamas in
Gaza, he keeps up the total blockade of the Gaza Strip. At the same
time, he tightens the oppression in the West Bank, where the
occupation army now routinely kills some six Palestinians per week.
Behind this non-logic there lurks a dream: the
dream that in the end all the Arabs would leave Palestine and just
leave us alone.
Was this the hidden hope of Zionism from the
beginning? Judging from its literature, the answer is no. In his
futuristic novel, "Altneuland", Theodor Herzl describes a Jewish
commonwealth in which Arabs live happily as equal citizens. The
young Ben-Gurion tried to prove that the Palestinian Arabs are
really Jews who at some time had no choice but to adopt Islam.
Vladimir Jabotinsky, the most extremist Zionist and forefather of
today’s Likud, wrote a poem in which he foresaw a Jewish state where
"The son of Arabia, the son of Nazareth and my son / will flourish
together in abundance and happiness".
Yet many people believe that these were empty
words, attuned to the realities of their time, but that underneath
it all was the basic will to turn all of Palestine into an
exclusively Jewish state. This desire, they believe, has
unconsciously directed all Zionist action from then to now.
However, this situation did not result from any
diabolical Israeli plan. Israelis don’t plan things, they just push
them along.
By splitting into two mutually hating entities,
the Palestinian people actually collaborate with this Zionist dream.
Instead of uniting against a vastly superior occupier, they
undermine each other. In both mini-capitals, Ramallah and Gaza,
there rules now a local ruling class, which has a vested interest in
sabotaging national unity.
Instead of uniting against Israel, they hate and
fight each other. Cutting the small Palestinian nation into two even
smaller, mutually hostile entities, both helpless against Israel, is
an act of political suicide.
On the face of it, the right-wing Israeli dream
has won. The Palestinian people, torn apart and rent by mutual
hatreds, are far removed from an effectual struggle for freedom and
independence. But this is a temporary situation.
In the end, this situation will explode. The
Palestine population, growing day by day (or night by night) will
come together again and restart the struggle for liberation. Like
every other people on earth, they will fight for their freedom.
Therefore, the "divide et impera" principle can
turn into a catastrophe. The real long-term interest of Israel is to
make peace with the entire Palestinian people, living peacefully in
a state of their own, in close cooperation with Israel.
Uri Avnery is an Israeli writer and founder of the
Gush Shalom peace movement. A member of the Irgun as a teenager,
Avnery sat in the Knesset from 1965 to 1974 and from 1979 to 1981.