Bijna opgelucht constateren de angelsaksische media dat het moment van de waarheid voor de joden in Israel en in de zogeheten diaspora is aangebroken.
A Long Overdue Moment of Truth in Israel
By BERNARD AVISHAI
Published: March 17, 2010
For all of its noisy factions, Israel really has only two political parties, the party that dreads the loss of Greater Israel — i.e., the party of settlements — and the party that dreads the isolation of global Israel — i.e., the party of America.
Think of the country as divided into paradigms, the first focused on Jerusalem’s fire, the second on Tel Aviv’s cool.
The Likud is mainly in the first party, as are all of Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition partners, save Labor. Yet the prime minister supposed he could keep a leg in both, or at least preclude the need for Israelis to choose, by focusing everybody, including U.S. diplomats and generals, on the dread of Iran, and also by activating neoconservative allies in the United States to downplay settlement activity.
Netanyahu’s stance, or ploy, finally came unraveled last week, and not only because of the dustup with Vice President Joe Biden over new construction in East Jerusalem. Even more important, perhaps, Gen. David Petraeus, the head of American forces in the Middle East and an expert in counterinsurgency, weighed in with a statement of the obvious, that America’s long acquiescence in Israel’s occupation was jeopardizing U.S. standing in the region.
Netanyahu has been trying to pretend that the crisis with Washington was precipitated by bad timing. Nobody in the administration is buying it, and it is not clear how the Israel lobby can even try to sell it. We have come to a moment of truth that is long overdue.
Biden’s speech at Tel Aviv University last week spent a good deal of time anticipating (or preempting) Netanyahu on Iran, reassuring Israelis-in-general about their existence-in-general. This sounded more like a preliminary hymn than the inevitable sermon. The university is ground zero of the America party.
Still, Biden looked a little surprised when he found that his only strong applause line was an unequivocal condemnation of new Jewish construction in East Jerusalem. This caused Knesset Speaker Ruby Rivlin, the self-styled conscience of the Likud, to issue a condemnation of his own — namely, of the Tel Aviv University audience.
The point is, there is a culture war in Israel now, and the only way the liberal side of it can mount an offensive is if America keeps the heat on. It is futile to treat Israel as if it were the embodiment of some big Jewish psyche in need of reassurances to regain trust in the world.
Israel has its enemies, of course, but it is not the fear of extinction that keeps it wedded to the status quo, which is a security nightmare in its own right. Rather, Israeli leaders have resisted plausible peace ideas because a large and hardened minority, perhaps a third of Jewish Israelis, regards peace as an end to the divinely self-enclosed way of life they have established in and around Jerusalem. The squishy, declining, more cosmopolitan and secular majority is unwilling to confront them for the sake of Palestinians — that is, not unless they have to in order to remain joined to the Western world.
Nobody here knows how violently the Israeli right would be prepared to defend the settlement project against the Israeli state itself. To the extent that Israeli politics are merely electoral politics, however, the fight is clearly over swing voters: immigrants from the former Soviet Union and their acculturated children, better educated Mizrahim — traditionalist Jews drawn to orthodoxy but who have traveled the world.
In recent years — what with the collapse of Oslo, the suicide bombings, the rise of Ahmadinejad — these voters have swung sharply toward the settlers’ gestalt. Another recent poll of high school students reveals that over half would deny Arab citizens of Israel the right to vote. To be for peace is to be naïve, trusting of “the Arabs.”
The global party can win back the initiative, but this means giving swing voters something new and more urgent to be not naïve about — something like reliance on hard-liners and AIPAC to deliver America.
Lees verder: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/18/opinion/18iht-edavishai.html
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3 opmerkingen:
"Ik was erbij toen ze koekjes ging bakken voor Israelische militairen en de voorbereidingen trof voor de sabbat. Eigenlijk het leven van een doorsnee huisvrouw."
http://weblogs.vpro.nl/buitenland/2010/03/18/blog-5slot/
1 Geschreven door: Sonja
Op: 18 maart 2010 at 15:59
Je reactie wacht op moderatie.
Ik betwijfel ten sterkste dat “een doorsnee huisvrouw” koekjes bakt voor Israëlische soldaten. Helaas kan de schrijfster niet uitstijgen boven haar angst om aan te geven dat de situatie van beide vrouwen totaal ongelijkwaardig is, in tegenstelling tot de suggestie die hier gewekt wordt. Met de term “buren” begint het al. Deze mensen zijn geen “buren”. De een is een bezetter (én formeel een crimineel) en de ander wordt bezet. Met buren zijn heeft dat niets te maken. En met een “soap” al helemaal niet.
(en nu moet ik wachten op moderatie?)
En zo moddert men aan
anzi
Ik wacht nog steeds op 'moderatie'.
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