The Palestinian Ideology Ignores Reality. By Michael Curtis.
The Palestinian Ideology Ignores Reality. By Michael Curtis. American Thinker, October 27, 2013.
Curtis:
Among
ideology, a fundamental belief system, and recognition of reality, there has
always been a huge intellectual gap.
History is full of instances when all too many people have refused to
recognize the disastrous consequences of adhering to an ideology, usually based
on myth, regardless of a reality that contradicts their firm beliefs. The key problem is that individuals espousing
some ideological point of view may have invested so much emotional attachment
to it that they not only abandon objectivity, but also are incapable of
renouncing a viewpoint, a myth, or a false political religion that has been
discredited or may be irrelevant. They
do not want to disavow the part of themselves that has accepted falsity.
This is
now true of the ideological believers in the Palestinian narrative of
victimhood. Almost everyone recognizes
the mistakes of “true believers” in refusing to admit the horrors of the Stalinist
era in the Soviet Union and the Mao Zedong years in China. Supporters of and apologists for those
regimes persisted in ignoring the reality that they were totalitarian, savagely
cruel, responsible for systematic terror, and engaged in the slaughter of tens
of millions of their innocent citizens held to be enemies.
Adherence
to the ideology of Communism meant both condoning the horrors and cruelty as
inevitable and refusing to accept any possible compromise or qualification of
that ideology. Nor could adherents
accept that this ideological view, though partly rational, was largely a myth,
albeit one capable of mobilizing people.
Today,
that mixture of reason and myth is present in a Palestinian ideology of
victimhood, an ideology that seeks to mobilize political support by insistence
that Palestinians are being persecuted by Israel, a state that must be
rejected. Supporters of the Palestinian
cause can argue as part of that ideology for Israeli withdrawal from disputed
or occupied territory captured in 1967, for the establishment of a Palestinian
state, and for a solution to the Palestinian refugee question by a Palestinian
right of return.
But the
ideology departs from objectivity in referring to Israel as a colonial power
from which Palestinians must be liberated.
That power is said to oppress Palestinians and to engage in terror
against them. The reality is that it is
Palestinian terrorism that has accounted for the murder of more than 1,500
Israelis over the last twenty years.
The
ideologists may raise legitimate points about the settlements built since 1967
in the West Bank. Yet it serves no
purpose to argue that these settlements are the main obstacle to peace
negotiations. Nor is it reasonable to
argue that Israeli policy has been unchanging and inflexible, that it is
unremittingly oppressive, and that it is based on the argument that “Between
the sea and the Jordan River there will be only Israeli sovereignty.” It is true that this argument was made by a
relatively small group among the Likud party in 1977. But it is not the policy of Israeli
governments, as has been shown by the various offers of a compromise solution
on territory shown by Prime Minister Ehud Barak in 2000, and by Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert in 2008.
The
Palestinian ideology has formulated the concept of Nakba, catastrophe, resulting from the Arab defeat in their war against
Israel in 1948-49. Left unsaid is the
crucial reality that it was Arab armies that had invaded Israel on its creation
and caused the catastrophe. The
Palestinian state, because of Arab refusal, never came into existence 66 years
ago, as proposed by the UNGA resolution of November 1947, but the refugee
problem did. Moreover, it was the threat
reiterated by President Nasser among others to eliminate the Jewish State of
Israel and his actions producing a casus
belli that led to the 1967 war and the capture of Arab territory – the now
disputed West Bank and East Jerusalem.
It was this threat and consequent actions that have prevented a
Palestinian state from being established.
The
Palestinian ideology and activists on behalf of that ideology or apologists for
Palestinian terrorism refuse to recognize benefits that arise from employment
of Palestinians by Israeli enterprises.
Rather, they insist on the self-defeating policy of boycott, divestment,
and sanctions in so many areas of life against Israel. Or they maintain the image of Israeli/Jewish
conspiracy eager to rule over an oppressed people.
Even
more, the ideologists refuse to recognize both the security problem of Israel
and the reality of the continuing attacks by Hamas from Gaza and Hezb’allah
from Lebanon on Israeli civilians.
Rather, they concentrate on a number of issues: an uncompromising view
of territory in the area; a solution of the refugee problem that would
eliminate the Jewish State of Israel; the insistence on Jerusalem as a capital
of any Palestinian state; and anti-imperialism, which means hostility towards
the United States as well as Israel.
Hatred and venom are more noticeable in these arguments than are
overtures of conciliation.
No
conciliation is likely if the starting premise of Palestinian ideology is
insistence on a state that must consist of the whole area of Palestine as
defined in the British Mandate, thus eliminating the existing State of
Israel. Equally, the Palestinian refugee
problem remains unresolved if Palestinians, and previously other Arabs who also
used it as a propaganda device, persist in holding that all refugees, and now
their descendants including grandchildren, have the right to return to places
where they lived before the war in 1948, and most of which no longer
exist. The demographic impact of this
would clearly mean the end of the Jewish State of Israel.
The
issue of the future of Jerusalem is also related to the fallacious Palestinian
ideological narrative of victimhood.
This asserts that Jews have no historic right to any area of Mandated
Palestine, since they lived there for only a short time, if at all. This assertion means there is no connection
between Jews and their ancient homeland and their historic holy places. Rather, the ideology identifies “Palestinians”
with the Canaanites of several thousand years ago and asserts that because
there have been Islamist conquests of the area since the 7th century, they are
another Islamic group having a right to the land. In this absurd distortion of history, Israel
has no legal right to Jerusalem or anywhere else in Palestine.
The
Palestinian ideology has incorporated what is now the politically correct
mantra of opposition to colonialism and imperialism. Not only is Palestinian self-determination an
end in itself, but it also implies the end of Israeli colonization. An ideology of this kind can hardly be the
basis of peace negotiations when it, above all in the version of Hamas and
other radical Islamists, calls for the destruction of the Jewish state. Nor can it be useful if Palestinians insist
on preconditions or concessions by Israel before any negotiations start.
If
Berlin and Vienna are trying, with considerable success, to come to terms with
their infamous past of Nazism, why can’t Palestinians do the same in
recognition of the Jewish past in Palestine?
That recognition is not near at hand.
Instead, Hamas’s answer is building a very large, well-constructed, and
sophisticated tunnel from Khan Younis in the south part of the Gaza Strip into
Israel in order to attack civilians in Israeli border towns and villages. Hamas, the Islamist expression of Palestinian
ideology, prefers to waste resources of its subjects and to invest in terror,
not peace.