Time to Choose: Liberalism or Zionism? By Dov Waxman.
Time to Choose: Liberalism or Zionism? By Dov Waxman. Haaretz, April 23, 2014.
Waiting for the Palestinian Godot. By Ari Shavit. Haaretz, April 24, 2014.
Discard the false visions of a binational state. By Salman Masalha. Haaretz, March 19, 2014.
Waxman:
It’s
not easy being a liberal Zionist. Denounced by right-wing Zionists for being
insufficiently pro-Israel and disparaged by left-wing anti-Zionists for being
insufficiently universalist, liberal Zionists have long been on the defensive.
How can they square their commitment to Jewish statehood with their commitment
to liberal democracy? How can they support Israel when it oppresses
Palestinians? How can they criticize Israel when it is the victim of terrorism,
rejectionism and anti-Semitism? How can they align themselves with Israel’s
enemies?
Challenged
with such questions from the left and right, liberal Zionists have defended
Israel’s claim to be a Jewish and democratic state (often conveniently
overlooking the fact that Arabs make up almost 20 percent of its citizens). They
have also championed the establishment of a Palestinian state in the occupied
territories. For liberal Zionists, a two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not only morally and strategically necessary
for Israel, it is necessary for them. It is the only way to reconcile their
Zionism and their liberalism; their support for Israel and their support for
equality and human rights.
As long
as the two-state solution is possible, liberal Zionism makes sense, at least to
its adherents. This is why liberal Zionists have placed such high hopes on the
U.S.-backed peace process between Israel and the Palestinians. While most
Israelis and Palestinians — and many disinterested observers — long ago gave up
their expectations for the peace process and now regard it with a mixture of
skepticism and cynicism, liberal Zionists, especially those in the United
States, still fervently believe in it. They have enthusiastically thrown their
support behind American Jewish organizations like J Street that lobby for it.
The peace process offers the tantalizing prospect of the realization of the
liberal Zionists’ dream — two states for two peoples living peacefully side by
side. As long as there’s a peace process, the dream lives on.
The
failure of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s peace initiative, therefore, is
a bitter blow for liberal Zionists. Over the past nine months, they set aside
their doubts and invested their hopes in the slim chance that Kerry would
somehow be able to cajole, entice and pressure Benjamin Netanyahu and Mahmoud
Abbas into making the difficult decisions and compromises necessary for a peace
agreement. Despite all the evidence to the contrary, liberal Zionists
desperately tried to convince themselves that this time things would turn out differently.
Although every previous U.S. administration that has tried to broker peace has
failed, the Obama administration could succeed; although Bibi has never
demonstrated bold leadership, now he would; although Abbas has already turned
down a previous Israeli offer, this time he wouldn’t.
It is
now brutally clear that the current peace process will not end the conflict.
Even if peace talks continue, there is no real prospect that a comprehensive
final-status agreement can be reached, let alone implemented. Without such an
agreement, the two-state solution is impossible to achieve since it can only be
accomplished through mutual consent, not unilateral actions (such as an Israeli
withdrawal from parts of the West Bank or Palestinian membership in the United
Nations).
The
apparent demise of the peace process forces liberal Zionists to confront a
painful question that many wish to avoid — if a two state solution is now
impossible, should they support, however reluctantly, a one-state solution?
Must they concede that the only way to end the occupation is to endorse the
principle of equal rights for Jews and Palestinians in all of Israel/Palestine?
While granting citizenship to Palestinians living under Israeli rule in the
West Bank effectively spells the end of the Jewish state, how much longer can
liberal Zionists uphold Jewish self-determination at the expense of Palestinian
self-determination?
To be
sure, a one-state solution may be just as impossible as a two-state solution,
if not more so — civil war and even ethnic cleansing are more likely outcomes
than peaceful coexistence. Perhaps this long, interminable conflict cannot be
resolved, at least not for the foreseeable future. In that case, liberal
Zionists much accept that there is no easy way for them to reconcile their
liberalism and their Zionism. Instead, they must either abandon their
liberalism or their Zionism, or just learn to live with the constant tension
between them. Whatever they choose, it will only become harder to be a liberal
Zionist.