Jimmy Carter, by publishing his book Palestine Peace Not Apartheid,
walked straight into the buzz saw that is the Israel lobby. Among the
vitriolic attacks on the former President was the claim by Abraham
Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, that Carter is
"outrageous" and "bigoted" and that his book raises "the old canard and
conspiracy theory of Jewish control of the media, Congress, and the U.S.
government." Many Democratic Party leaders, anxious to keep the Israel
lobby's money and support, have hotfooted it out the door, with incoming
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announcing that Carter "does not speak for
the Democratic Party on Israel."
Carter's book exposes little about Israel. The enforced segregation,
abject humiliation and spiraling Israeli violence against Palestinians
have been detailed in the Israeli and European press and, with
remarkable consistency, by all the major human rights organizations. The
assault against Carter, rather, says more about the failings of the
American media--which have largely let Israel hawks heap calumny on
Carter's book. It exposes the indifference of the Bush Administration
and the Democratic leadership to the rule of law and basic human rights,
the timidity of our intellectual class and the moral bankruptcy of
institutions that claim to speak for American Jews and the Jewish state.
The bleakness of life for Palestinians, especially in the Gaza Strip, is
a mystery only to us. In the current Israeli campaign in Gaza, now
sealed off from the outside world, almost 500 Palestinians, most
unarmed, have been killed. Sanctions, demanded by Israel and imposed by
the international community after the Hamas victory last January in what
were universally acknowledged to be free and fair elections,
have led to the collapse of civil society in Gaza and the West Bank, as
well as widespread malnutrition. And Palestinians in the West Bank are
being encased, in open violation of international law, in a series of
podlike militarized ghettos with Israel's massive $2 billion
project to build a "security barrier." This barrier will gobble up at
least 10 percent of the West Bank, including most of the precious
aquifers and at least 40,000 acres of Palestinian farmland. The project
is being financed in large part through $9 billion in American loan
guarantees, although when Congress approved the legislation in April
2003, Israel was told that the loans could be used "only to support
activities in the geographic areas which were subject to the
administration of the Government of Israel prior to June 5, 1967."
But it is in Gaza that conditions are currently reaching a full-blown
humanitarian crisis. "Gaza is in its worst condition ever," Gideon Levy
wrote recently in the Israeli paper Ha'aretz. "The Israel Defense Forces
have been rampaging through Gaza--there's no other word to describe
it--killing and demolishing, bombing and shelling, indiscriminately....
How contemptible all the sublime and nonsensical talk about 'the end of
the occupation' and 'partitioning the land' now appears. Gaza is
occupied, and with greater brutality than before.... This is disgraceful
and shocking collective punishment."
And as Gaza descends into civil war, with Hamas and Fatah factions
carrying out gun battles in the streets, Ha'aretz reporter Amira Hass
bitterly notes, "The experiment was a success: The Palestinians are
killing each other. They are behaving as expected at the end of the
extended experiment called 'what happens when you imprison 1.3 million
human beings in an enclosed space like battery hens.'"
In fact, if there is a failing in Carter's stance, it is that he is too
kind to the Israelis, bending over backward to assert that he is only
writing about the occupied territories. Israel itself, he says, is a
democracy. This would come as a surprise to the 1.3 million Israeli
Arabs who live as second-class citizens in the Jewish state. The
poverty rate among Israeli Arabs is more than twice that of the Jewish
population. Those Israeli Arabs who marry Palestinians from Gaza or the
West Bank are not permitted to get Israeli residency for their spouses.
And Israeli Arabs, who do not serve in the military or the country's
intelligence services and thus lack the important personal connections
and job networks available to veterans, are systematically shut out of
good jobs. Any Jew, who may speak no Hebrew or ever been to Israel, can
step off a plane and become an Israeli citizen, while a Palestinian
living abroad whose family's roots in Palestine may go back generations
is denied citizenship.
The Israel lobby in the United States does not serve Israel or the
Jewish community--it serves the interests of the Israeli extreme right
wing. Most Israelis have come to understand that peace will be possible
only when their country complies with international law and permits
Palestinians to build a viable and sustainable state based on the 1967
borders, including, in some configuration, East Jerusalem.
This stark demarcation between Israeli pragmatists and the extreme right
wing was apparent when I was in the Middle East for the New York Times
during Yitzhak Rabin's 1992 campaign for prime minister. The majority of
American Jewish organizations and neoconservative intellectuals made no
pretense of neutrality. They had morphed into extensions of the
right-wing Likud Party. These American groups, to Rabin's dismay, had
gone on to build, with Likud, an alliance with right-wing Christian
groups filled with real anti-Semites whose cultural and historical
ignorance of the Middle East was breathtaking. This collection of
messianic Jews and Christians, leavened with rabid American
imperialists, believed they had been handed a divine or moral mandate to
rule the Middle East, whether the Arabs liked it or not.
When Rabin, who had come to despise what the occupation was doing to the
citizenry of his own country, was sworn in as prime minister, the
leaders of these American Jewish organizations, along with their
buffoonish supporters on the Christian right, were conspicuous by their
absence. On one of Rabin's first visits to Washington after he assumed
office, according to one of his aides, he was informed that a group of
American Jewish leaders were available to meet him. The surly old
general, whose gravelly cigarette voice seemed to rise up from below his
feet, curtly refused. He told his entourage he did not have time to
waste on "scumbags."
Chris Hedges, a senior fellow at The Nation Institute, is the author of War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning (Anchor). His new book, American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America, was published this month by the Free Press.
© 2006
The Nation
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