A Cultural Redesign of the Peace Process. By Richard Landes.
Redesigning the Peace Process. By Richard Landes. Tablet, September 25, 2012. Also at The Augean Stables.
Romney Is Right on Culture and the Wealth of Nations. By Richard Landes. Wall Street Journal, August 5, 2012.
Landes (Peace Process):
Since
the outbreak of the Second Intifada in 2000, there hasn’t been a moment when
the punditocracy hasn’t insisted that Israel needs to make a deal with the
Palestinians—and soon. Otherwise, they claim, Israeli democracy, saddled with
millions of Palestinians living under Israeli control without citizenship, will
have to choose between the twin catastrophes
of democratic suicide and apartheid. And since the solution that everyone knows
is the eventual one–land for peace–is so clear, let’s just get on with it.
It
hasn’t panned out. We’re now approaching two decades of failure of the
two-state solution. Every strategy for pulling it off—Oslo, Taba, Geneva, Road
Map, Dayton, Obama/Clinton—has, despite sometimes enormous efforts, failed or
died stillborn. And yet, with each failure, a new round of hope emerges, with
commentators and politicians arguing that this time, if we just tinker with
some of the details, we’ll get peace right. (Or, as an increasing number have
now come to believe, it’s time we abandon the two-state solution entirely.)
The
predominant explanation for this impasse in the West has focused on Israel’s
role: settlements that provoke,
checkpoints that humiliate, blockades that strangle, and walls that imprison. Palestinian “no’s” typically get a pass: Of course Arafat said “no” at Camp
David; he only got Bantustans while Israelis kept building illegal settlements.
Suicide bombers are excused as registering a legitimate protest at being denied
the right to be a free people in their own land. In Condoleezza Rice’s words: “[The Palestinians] are perfectly
ready to live side by side with Israel because they just want to live in peace .
. . the great majority of people, they just want a better life.” The corollary
to such thinking, of course, holds that if only the Israelis didn’t constantly
keep the Palestinians down the world would be a better place. So, the sooner we
end the occupation, the better, even if it means urging the United States to
pressure Israel into the necessary concessions. It’s for Israel’s own good.
This
line of thinking is driven entirely by politics. Oslo thinkers from Bill
Clinton to Thomas Friedman believe that what was needed was a political
settlement and the rest would take care of itself. In 2007, Rice reflected this
outlook in a statement of faith that projected a peculiarly modern outlook: “I
just don’t believe mothers want their children to grow up to be suicide
bombers. I think the mothers want their children to grow up to go to
university. And if you can create the right conditions, that’s what people are
going to do.”
Overestimating
the power of politics and dramatically underestimating the importance of
culture has actually hindered the possibility for a political solution. For
Jews, especially progressive Jews, the early second decade of the 21st century
poses a particularly interesting and painful meditation just in time for Yom
Kippur: In our quest for “fairness,” for splitting the blame evenly, for
misidentifying problems as political and therefore easily solvable—so easily
solvable they could be dispatched with a simple email, as one exasperated BBC
anchor put it recently—are we actually working against both parties in the
conflict?
I
believe the answer is yes. And those who wish to pursue a peaceful resolution
need to take a hard look at the cultural difference between Israelis and
Arabs—and craft policy that confronts it.
***
Any
approach that pays heed to cultural issues yields a very different view as to
why the conflict persists. The zero-sum logic of Arab attitudes toward Israel
does not represent merely the choices made by politicians, but Islamic
religiosity and deep-seated cultural mores. From the Arab perspective, the very
existence of Israel represents a stain on Arab honor and a blasphemy to Islam’s
dominion in Dar al Islam. Some, like
the Palestinian Authority, may have made a tactical shift in which they will,
despite the shame of it, talk with Israelis and even make public agreements.
But they have treated such engagement as a Trojan horse, a feint to position
for further war. Within this cultural context, the peace process has actually
served as a war process.
Well-meaning
Oslo proponents, afraid that criticism of, and demands on, the Palestinians
would delay the peace process, denounced anyone who made these kinds of
observations as enemies of peace. So, when Arafat said “no” at Camp David in
the summer of 2000, and a wave of suicide bombers came pouring out of the belly
of the horse, these same Oslo supporters, including many an alter-Juif, rather than admitting they had
called it wrong, preferred to blame
Israel.
But
bitterest of ironies, in so doing, they fed the very culture they denied. Palestinian
hatred has festered under the guidance of Oslo-empowered elites, unopposed by
the very actors one would expect to have the courage to call out such vitriol:
journalists, human-rights organizations, and progressives. Instead, these
groups have gone out of their way not to inform their readers of this culture of hate.
By
constantly reinforcing a Palestinian sense of grievance against Israel,
activists like the late Rachel Corrie,
journalists like BBC’s Jeremy Bowen and CNN’s Ben Wedeman, and Israel-obsessed
organizations like Human Rights Watch have unwittingly contributed to the very
war that rages. And as a result of this consensus, Israel appears to most in
the West as a terrible oppressor when the sad but redeeming truth is that the
Israelis are the best enemies one could hope for, and they face the worst.
Nothing
illustrates the cultural gap between Israel and Palestine better—and offers a
more immediate and constructive way out—than the problem of Palestinian
refugees. They are the symbol of Arab political priorities. When faced with the
catastrophic humiliation of 1948, when the combined Arab nations, fully
confident of a glorious victory, failed to destroy the upstart Jewish nation in
the heart of the Muslim world, the Arab leadership unanimously chose to herd
Arab refugees into prison camps so that they could serve as a symbol of Israeli
crimes and a breeding ground or the counter-attack.
For
over 60 years, Arab leaders have blocked any efforts to remove these people
from these wretched camps because to do so would be a tacit acceptance of
Israel’s permanence and would acknowledge the humiliating defeat. (By contrast,
Israel rapidly moved the even larger number of Jews chased from the Arab world
in 1948 out of their refugee camps.) The Arabs thus went from a zero-sum loss
(the establishment of Israel) to a negative-sum solution: sacrifice your own
people on the altar of your lost honor. No negotiations, no recognition, no
peace.
Not
only do Palestinian negotiators insist
on the return of 5 million refugees to Israel (it was one of two key deal-breakers at Camp David), but the
Palestinian ambassador to Lebanon recently explained that Palestinian refugees
not residing in the future Palestine would not be citizens in that state. In
other words, Palestinian refugees still captive in camps in Lebanon and Syria
and Jordan only have a right to citizenship in Israel.
So,
here’s my proposal to those who somehow feel we must revive the peace process
now, before it’s too late. Call for the Palestinians to show their good
intentions, not toward the Israelis, but toward their own people. Get those
“refugees” out of the prison camps into which they have been so shamefully
consigned for most of a century.
Begin
at home, with the over 100,000 refugees in Territory A, under complete PA
control. Bring in Habitat for Humanity and Jimmy Carter to help them build
decent, affordable, new homes. Let us all participate in turning the powers of
Palestinian ingenuity away from manufacturing hatred, fomenting violence, and building
villas for the rich and powerful, while the refugees live in squalor as a
showcase of Israeli cruelty, and start to do good for a people victimized by
their own leadership.
To take
this position, so aligned with progressive values, however, we would have to
confront two obstacles. First, overcoming our immense reluctance to criticize
and make demands on the Palestinians. That would also mean we’d also have to
renounce the impulse to attack as racists or Islamophobes those making the
demands. We also have to consider, especially true for journalists in the
field, the possibility that we’re intimidated, afraid to criticize people with
so prickly a collective ego. Second, it would mean overcoming the widespread
hunger for stories of “Jews behaving badly.” After all, if it weren’t for the
appetite for moral Schadenfreude, the whole idea of pinning the miserable fate
of the Palestinian refugees on Israel rather than on their Arab jailors would
never have taken hold in the first place.
***
Such
introspection and self-criticism can be a little like chewing glass, but I can
think of no more important communal task this Yom Kippur.
How
often have I gone overboard, how often have I accepted a lethal narrative in
order to save face with my friends who expect me to rise above being an
“Israel-firster”? How often have I admitted to crimes on behalf of my people
without checking to see if they were accurate? How often have I failed to speak
out against the depravity of the Palestinian leadership, out of fear of being
called an Islamophobe? In the answers to those questions lies the path to a
real peace in this troubled, blessed land.
Do we
outsiders who say we want peace want it badly enough to confront our own
comfort zones? Let’s hope. Those Palestinians and Israelis who are ready to
live in a win-win world depend on it.