Talks Will Go Nowhere. By Benny Morris. The Daily Beast, April 10, 2012.
Morris:
Western
observers have suggested that this prospective exchange is equivalent to a
diplomatic cul-de-sac, and have long pointed to Israeli recalcitrance over the
settlements as the chief obstacle to progress toward peace. Recent Israeli
government announcements of moves to beef up settlements on Jerusalem’s
peripheries—most notably in Har Homa, a new neighborhood just east of the
Jerusalem-Bethlehem road—have done nothing to help Israel’s image abroad.
And
without doubt, the whole settlement enterprise in Judea and Samaria—the
Biblical term Israel uses to define the West Bank—has posed an obstacle to
peace, intensifying Israeli acquisitive drives and expansionist ambitions as
well as underlining Palestinian fears—or certainties—that Israel has no real
intention of ever relinquishing the territories.
But in
deep and broad historical terms, all of this is a giant red herring. The
Palestinian political elite—both of the secular Fatah persuasion, which
controls the PA, and Hamas, the Islamist party that has ruled the Gaza Strip
since 2007 (and won the Palestinian general elections in 2006)—has no intention
of ever accepting Israel’s legitimacy or a two-state settlement based on the
partition of Palestine into two states, one for the Palestinian Arabs and one
for the Jewish people.
Hamas
has always been clear about this; its 1988 charter states simply that, through
jihad, it will uproot Zionism and that no Arab leader has the right to concede
even one inch of Palestine’s sacred land to the Jews.
Fatah
has played a more cagey game, but its historical record is no less clear to
those willing to look at the facts. The successive leaders of the Palestinian
Arab national movement have consistently rejected a two-state solution. Haj
Amin al-Husseini, its first leader, did so twice, in 1937 (when he rejected the
Peel Commission partition proposals) and in 1947-1948 (when he rejected the UN
General Assembly partition plan, Resolution 181). His successor, Yasser Arafat who founded the
Fatah in the late 1950s and led it—and the PA—until his death in 2004,
similarly decisively rejected the idea twice (while occasionally making vague
positive noises to appease Washington and Western Europe): In 1978, when he
turned down the Sadat-Begin Camp David Agreement that provided for the
establishment of a Palestinian “Autonomy”—which would have devolved into
statehood—in the West Bank and Gaza Strip; and in 2000, when he rejected the
two-state proposals that ultimately offered the Palestinians 95% of the West
Bank, 100% of the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem (Ehud Barak’s peace offer in
July 2000 and the Clinton “Parameters” of December 2000, which the Barak
government, albeit grudgingly, endorsed).
Neither
in 1978 nor in 2000 did Abbas publicly dissent from Arafat’s rejectionist
position—and, in 2008, after a protracted negotiation with then Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert, Abbas himself in effect said “no” to Olmert’s peace plan,
which had somewhat upgraded (from the Palestinian perspective) the Clinton
“Parameters.” (Actually he never uttered a full-throated “no”—he simply refused
to respond to the plan, despite American and Israeli prodding, and a few months
later Olmert was out of office, replaced by Netanyahu and his right-wing
coalition, and the plan was off the table).
To this
one needs to add that Abbas has repeatedly, publicly, over the past decade
rejected the Clinton formula of “two states for two peoples”—while endorsing
what he calls a “two-state solution”—and has inflexibly affirmed the “right” of
the Palestinian refugees to return to pre-1967 Israel proper. As there are in
the world some 5-6 million Palestinian “refugees” (meaning those still left of
the original 1948 refugees and their children, grandchildren and
great-grandchildren) and as Israel has about 1.5 million Arab citizens and less
than 6 million Jewish citizens, a mass refugee return would create an Arab
majority in Israel and nullify the state’s Jewish character.
This
would seem to indicate that Abbas’s hoped-for “two-state solution” means one
state for the Palestinian Arabs in the West Bank and Gaza, and another state
for the Palestinians (with a Jewish minority) where pre-1967 Israel used to be.
This doesn’t really give the Jews very much, when it comes to their
two-thousand year quest for a resumption of political sovereignty.
And
this is the real, protracted, historical deal-breaker which will stymie the
prospective “peace” meetings. Settlements can be finessed and uprooted (as
Israel’s uprooting of all the Gaza Strip settlements in 2005 demonstrated). But
uprooting deep, basic Palestinian rejectionism is a far more difficult task.
Of Herrings and Elephants: Benny Morris and “Palestinian Rejectionism.” By Daniel Levy. The Daily Beast, April 16, 2012.
A Response to Daniel Levy. By Benny Morris. The Daily Beast, April 17, 2012.
A Second Response to Benny Morris. By Daniel Levy. The Daily Beast, April 24, 2012.
Israel Under Siege. By Benny Morris. The Daily Beast, July 31, 2012.
Palestinians Dupe West. By Benny Morris. The National Interest, April 25, 2011.
Ilan Pappe: The Liar as Hero. By Benny Morris. The New Republic, March 17, 2011. From the April 7, 2011 issue. Also here.
Bleak House: The Grim Prospects for a Palestinian State. By Benny Morris. Tablet, December 2, 2010.
Morris:
Which
brings us to the current Israeli-Palestinian negotiating impasse. I am not
talking about the tactical problem posed by continued or discontinued Israeli
construction in West Bank settlements, which will probably be resolved, after
some bumps and hesitations. I am speaking of a basic, strategic impasse which,
unfortunately, is far more cogent and telling than the ongoing “negotiations,”
which are unlikely to lead to a peace treaty or even a “framework” agreement
for a future peace accord. This unlikelihood stems from a set of obstacles that
I see as insurmountable, given current political-ideological mindsets.
The
first, the one that American and European officials never express and—if
impolitely mentioned in their presence—turn away from in distaste, is that
Palestinian political elites, of both the so-called “secular” and Islamist
varieties, are dead set against partitioning the Land of Israel/Palestine with
the Jews. They regard all of Palestine as their patrimony and believe that it
will eventually be theirs. History, because of demography and the steady
empowerment of the Arab and Islamic worlds and the West’s growing alienation
from Israel, and because of Allah’s wishes, is, they believe, on their side.
They do not want a permanent two-state solution, with a Palestinian Arab state
co-existing alongside a (larger) Jewish state; they will not compromise on this
core belief and do not believe, on moral or practical grounds, that they
should.
This
basic Palestinian rejectionism, amounting to a Weltanschauung, is routinely ignored or denied by most Western
commentators and officials. To grant it means to admit that the Israeli-Arab
conflict has no resolution apart from the complete victory of one side or the
other (with the corollary of expulsion, or annihilation, by one side of the
other)—which leaves leaders like President Barack Obama with nowhere realistic
to go with regard to the conflict. Philosophically, acceptance of the rock-like
unpliability of this reality is extremely problematic, given the ongoing
military and philosophical clash between the West and various forces in the
Islamic world. Perhaps the fight between America and its allies and its enemies
in the Middle East and South Asia and North Africa and the banlieues of Western
Europe will go on and on, until one side is vanquished?
In this
connection, our age, it may turn out, resembles the classic age of appeasement,
the 1930s, when the Western democracies (and the Soviet Union) were ranged
against, but preferred not to confront, Nazi Germany and its allies, Fascist
Italy, and expansionist Japan. During that decade, Hitler’s inexorable martial,
racist, and uncompromising mindset was misread by Western leaders, officials,
and intellectuals—and for much the same reasons. Living in unideological
societies, they could not fathom the minds and politics of their ideologically
driven antagonists. The leaders and intellectuals of the Western democracies,
educated and suffused with liberal and relativist values, by and large were
unable to comprehend the essential “otherness” of Hitler and ended up fighting
him, to the finish, after negotiation and compromise had proved useless.
***
Another
problem for Westerners is that the Palestinians, by design or no, speak to them
in several voices. Hamas, which may represent the majority of the Palestinian
people and certainly has the unflinching support of some 40 percent of them,
speaks clearly. It openly repudiates a two-state solution. Hamas leaders, to
bamboozle naïve (or wicked) Westerners like Henry Siegman, occasionally express
a tactical readiness for a long-term truce under terms that they know are
unacceptable to any Jewish Israelis (complete Israeli withdrawal to the 1967
borders and acceptance of the refugees’ “Right of Return”), but their strategic
message is clear, echoing the Roman statesman Cato the Elder: “Israel must be
destroyed.”
The
secular Palestinian leadership looks to a similar historical denouement but is
more flexible on the tactics and pacing. They express a readiness for a
two-state solution but envision such an outcome as intermediate and temporary.
They speak of two states, a Palestinian Arab West Bank-Gaza-East Jerusalem state
and another state whose population is Jewish and Arab and which they believe
will eventually become majority-Arab within a generation or two through Arab
procreation (Palestinian Arab birth-rates are roughly twice those of Israeli
Jews) and the “return” of Palestinians with refugee status. This is why Fatah’s
leaders, led by Palestine National Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, flatly
reject the Clintonian formula of “two states for two peoples” and refuse to
recognize the “other” state, Israel, as a “Jewish state.” They hope that this
“other” state will also, in time, be “Arabized,” thus setting the stage for the
eventual merger of the two temporary states into one Palestinian Arab-majority
state between the River and the Sea.
Review Article: Benny Morris, Islamophobia, and the Case for the One-State Solution. By Oren Ben-Dor. Holy Land Studies, Vol. 9, No. 2 (November 2010).
One State, Two States: Resolving the Israel/Palestine Conflict. By Benny Morris. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2009.
Review of Benny Morris, One State, Two States: Resolving the Israel/Palestine Conflict. By Peter Gubser. Middle East Policy, Vol. 16, No. 4 (Winter 2009). Also here.
The Zero-Sum Question. By Elliot Jager. Commentary, July 1, 2009. Review of One State, Two States. By Benny Morris. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2009.
Review of Benny Morris, One State, Two States. By Ami Isseroff. MidEastWeb.
Christopher Hitchens has no love for Muslims unless they’re Palestinian. By Benny Morris. Haaretz, September 29, 2010.
Benny Morris on a “secular, democratic Palestine.” Elder of Ziyon, May 13, 2009. Also here, here, and The Augean Stables. [Excerpted from One State, Two States, pp 167-171.]
Morris:
The
Palestinian national movement started life with a vision and goal of a
Palestinian Muslim Arab-majority state in all of Palestine — a one-state
“solution” — and continues to espouse and aim to establish such a state down to
the present day. Moreover, and as a corollary, al-Husseini, the Palestinian
national leader during the 1930s and 1940s; the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO), which led the national movement from the 1960s to Yasser
Arafat’s death in November, 2004; and Hamas today — all sought and seek to
vastly reduce the number of Jewish inhabitants in the country, in other words,
to ethnically cleanse Palestine. Al-Husseini and the PLO explicitly declared
the aim of limiting Palestinian citizenship to those Jews who had lived in
Palestine permanently before 1917 (or, in another version, to limit it to those
50,000-odd Jews and their descendants). This goal was spelled out clearly in
the Palestinian National Charter and in other documents. Hamas has been
publicly more reserved on this issue, but its intentions are clear.
The
Palestinian vision was never — as described by various Palestinian spokesmen in
the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s to Western journalists — of a “secular, democratic
Palestine” (though it certainly sounded more palatable than, say, the
“destruction of Israel,” which was the goal it was meant to paper over or
camouflage). Indeed, “a secular democratic Palestine” had never been the goal of
Fatah or the so-called moderate groups that dominated the PLO between the 1960s
and the 2006 elections that brought Hamas to power.
Middle
East historian Rashid Khalidi has written that “in 1969 [the PLO] amended [its
previous goal and henceforward advocated] the establishment of a secular
democratic state in Palestine for Muslims, Christians and Jews, replacing
Israel.” And Palestinian-American journalist Ali Abunimah has written, in his
recent book, One Country: “The PLO did ultimately adopt [in the late 1960s or
1970s] the goal of a secular, democratic state in all Palestine as its official
stance.”
This is
hogwash. The Palestine National Council (PNC) never amended the Palestine
National Charter to the effect that the goal of the PLO was “a secular
democratic state in Palestine.” The words and notion never figured in the
charter or in any PNC or PLO Central Committee or Fatah Executive Committee
resolutions, at any time. It is a spin invented for gullible Westerners and was
never part of Palestinian mainstream ideology. The Palestinian leadership has
never, at any time, endorsed a “secular, democratic Palestine.”
The PNC
did amend the charter, in 1968 (not 1969). But the thrust of the emendation was
to limit non-Arab citizenship in a future Arab-liberated Palestine to “Jews who
had normally resided in Palestine until the beginning of the Zionist invasion”
— that is, 1917.
True,
the amended charter also guaranteed, in the future State of Palestine, “freedom
of worship and of visit” to holy sites to all, “without discrimination of race,
colour, language or religion.” And, no doubt, this was music to liberal Western
ears. But it had no connection to the reality or history of contemporary Muslim
Arab societies. What Muslim Arab society in the modern age has treated
Christians, Jews, pagans, Buddhists and Hindus with tolerance and as equals?
Why should anyone believe that Palestinian Muslim Arabs would behave any
differently?
Western
liberals like, or pretend, to view Palestinian Arabs, indeed all Arabs, as
Scandinavians, and refuse to recognize that peoples, for good historical,
cultural and social reasons, are different and behave differently in similar or
identical sets of circumstances.
So
where did the slogan of “a secular, democratic Palestine” originate? That goal
was first explicitly proposed in 1969 by the small Marxist splinter group the
Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP). According to Khalidi, “It
was [then] discreetly but effectively backed by the leaders of the mainstream,
dominant Fatah movement . . . The democratic secular state model eventually became
the official position of the PLO.” As I have said, this is pure invention. The
PNC, PLO and Fatah turned down the DFLP proposal, and it was never adopted or
enunciated by any important Palestinian leader or body – though the Western
media during the 1970s were forever attributing it to the Palestinians. As a
result, however, the myth has taken hold that this was the PLO’s official goal
through the late 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
And
today, again, and for the same reasons – the phrase retains its good, multicultural,
liberal ring – “a secular, democratic Palestine” is bandied about by
Palestinian one-state supporters. And a few one-statists, indeed, may sincerely
believe in and desire such a denouement. But given the realities of Palestinian
politics and behaviour, the phrase objectively serves merely as camouflage for
the goal of a Muslim Arab-dominated polity to replace Israel. And, as in the
past, the goal of “a secular democratic Palestine” is not the platform or
policy of any major Palestinian political institution or party.
Indeed,
the idea of a “secular democratic Palestine” is as much a nonstarter today as
it was three decades ago. It is a nonstarter primarily because the Palestinian
Arabs, like the world’s other Muslim Arab communities, are deeply religious and
have no respect for democratic values and no tradition of democratic
governance.
And
matters have only gotten worse since the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. For anyone who
has missed the significance of Hamas’s electoral victory in 2006 and the
violent takeover of the Gaza Strip in 2007, a mere glance at the West Bank and
Gaza today (and, indeed, at Israel’s Arab minority villages and towns) reveals
a landscape dominated by rapidly multiplying mosque minarets, the air filled
with the calls to prayer of the muezzins and alleyways filled with hijab-ed
women. Only fools and children were persuaded in 2006-07 that Hamas beat Fatah
merely because they had an uncorrupt image or dispensed aid to the poor. The
main reasons for the Hamas victory were religious and political: the growing
religiosity of the Palestinian masses and their “recognition” that Hamas
embodies the “truth” and, with Allah’s help, will lead them to final victory
over the infidels, much as Hamas achieved, through armed struggle, the
withdrawal of the infidels from the Gaza Strip in 2005.
And Now For Some Facts. By Benny Morris. The New Republic, May 8, 2006. Also here. Review of Mearsheimer and Walt.
Morris:
From
Mearsheimer and Walt, you would never suspect that the creation of the
Palestinian refugee problem in 1948 occurred against the backdrop, and as the
result, of a war—a war that for the Jews was a matter of survival, and which
those same Palestinians and their Arab brothers had launched. To omit this
historical background is bad history—and stark dishonesty. It is quite true,
and quite understandable, that the Israeli government during the war decided to
bar a return of the refugees to their homes—to bar the return of those who,
before becoming refugees, had attempted to destroy the Jewish state and whose
continued loyalty to the Jewish state, if they were readmitted, would have been
more than questionable. There was nothing “innocent,” as Mearsheimer and Walt
put it, about the Palestinians and their behavior before their
eviction-evacuation in 1947-1948 (as there was nothing innocent about Haj Amin
al Husseini’s work for the Nazis in Berlin from 1941 to 1945, broadcasting
anti-Allied propaganda and recruiting Muslim troops for the Wehrmacht). And
what befell the Palestinians was not “a moral crime,” whatever that might mean;
it was something the Palestinians brought down upon themselves, with their own
decisions and actions, their own historical agency. But they like to deny their
historical agency, and many “sympathetic” outsiders like to abet them in this
illusion, which is significantly responsible for their continued statelessness.
A new exodus for the Middle East? By Benny Morris. The Guardian, October 2, 2002.
No chance for peace in Israel. By Benny Morris. The Guardian, February 20, 2002.
Survival of the Fittest. Interview with Benny Morris by Ari Shavit. Haaretz, January 9, 2004. Also here, here, here. Part 1 here, here. Part 2 here, here. Part 1 at Haaretz. Part 2 at Haaretz.
Benny Morris: Moral Bankruptcy of a Zionist Historian. By Richard Silverstein. Tikkun Olam, February 25, 2004.
Diagnosing Benny Morris: The mind of a European settler. By Gabriel Ash. The Electronic Intifada, January 27, 2004.
Moral decay and Benny Morris. By Ali Abunimah. The Electronic Intifada, January 24, 2004.
Benny Morris’s Shocking Interview. By Baruch Kimmerling. History News Network, January 26, 2004. Also at The Electronic Intifada.
Relative Humanity: The Fundamental Obstacle to a One-State Solution in Historic Palestine. By Omar Barghouti. The Electronic Intifada, January 6, 2004. Part 1. Part 2.
The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited. By Benny Morris. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Also here.
Eyeless in Zion: When Palestine First Exploded. By Anita Shapira. The New
Republic, December 11, 2000. Review of Tom Segev, One Palestine Complete.
The Past Is Not a Foreign Country: The Failure of Israel’s “New Historians” to Explain War and Peace. By Anita
Shapira. The New Republic, November
29, 1999.
The New Historiography: Israel Confronts Its Past. By Benny Morris. Tikkun,
November/December 1988.
The Causes and Character of the Arab Exodus from Palestine: The Israel Defence Forces Intelligence Branch Analysis of June 1948. By Benny Morris. Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 22, No. 1 (January 1986).
Operation Dani and the Palestinian Exodus from Lydda and Ramle in 1948. By Benny Morris. The Middle East Journal, Vol. 40, No. 1 (Winter 1986).
Myths and Historiography of the 1948 Palestine War Revisited: The Case of Lydda. By Alon Kadish and Avraham Sela. The Middle East Journal, Vol. 59 No. 4 (Autumn 2005).
Righteous Victims: A History of the Zionist-Arab Conflict, 1881-2001. By Benny Morris. New York: Vintage Books, 2001. Part 1. Part 2. Also here.
1948 as Jihad. By Benny Morris. NJBR, July 14, 2013. With related articles.