Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
'Good Labor – Bad Likud': Dispelling the Myth
of 'Democracy' within Israel's Political Establishment
By Ramzy Baroud

Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 22, 2016
 |
|
14-year-olds Ayham Bassam Sabah and Salim Mahmoud Taha were shot
by an Israeli settler in eastern Ramallah today, February 19,
2016 |
|
The Israeli ‘Right’, as demonstrated by a scary coalition of rightwing
nationalists, ultranationalists and religious zealots, deserves all the
bad press it has garnered since its formation last May. But none
of this should come as a shock, as the ‘Right’ in Israel has never been
anything but a coalition of demagogues that catered to the lowest common
denominator in society. As unlikable as Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu is, he is, in fact, a fair representation of the
worst that Israel has to offer, which, over the years, has morphed to
represent mainstream thinking. But Israel has not always been
ruled by the right-wingers, and the likes of current Justice Minister, Ayelet
Shaked, who has made a habit ofcalls
for extermination and genocide of Palestinians, are relatively
newcomers to Israel’s political tussle. In previous Knessets, the likes of
her would have been assigned to a neglected seat in the back of the
Knesset, along with other lunatics who often mouthed profanities and
incessantly called for killing all Gentiles. Tellingly, she is now one of
the main centerpieces in Netanyahu’s menacing coalition.
Somehow, this may be of benefit to the wider world. At least now,
many would get to see Israel as the country that it has always been, but
which has cleverly hidden its real nature under a mask of liberal façade
and ever-touted democratic ideals. Few, with good conscience, can
claim that Netanyahu and his partners - Moshe Yaalon, Naftali Bennet and
Shaked, among others – are icons of democracy, any democracy, however
lacking. In fact, a
new draft in the Knesset, which is in the process of becoming a law,
proposes to punish any Israeli organization that dares question Israel’s
behavior and undemocratic practices. Those who are anticipating
the supposed liberal democratic forces in Israel to rise against the
destructive rightwing machine should also reconsider. Isaac Herzog, the
chairman of the Labor Party and head of the Zionist Union coalition is not
markedly different than Netanyahu, at least when it comes to issues of
substance. At best, he is a true manifestation of Israel’s center-left,
double-faced approach to politics. Oddly enough, it is the ‘Right’ that
has learned the tricks of the trade from the ‘Left’ in Israel, not the
other way around. In recent comments, Herzog
shouted from the pits of his party’s political irrelevance that he
does not “see a possibility at the moment of implementing the two-state
solution.” He told Israeli Army Radio that if he is to become a Prime
Minister, he would focus on implementing security measures instead of
investing in a bilateral agreement with the Palestinians. While
he partly blamed Netanyahu for the failure to achieve the supposedly
coveted goal of two states, he also assigned equal blame to the
ever-hapless Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, who has been watching for
years as his make-believe world of 'peace process' has been collapsing
around him, unable to even control his own exit from, or entry to the West
Bank without a prior permit from the Israeli army. However, the
issue is far more important than blaming Israel’s hypocritical and
cowardly ‘Left’: but, rather, to highlight a dominant myth about the
‘Right’ and ‘Left’ within Israel’s political establishment. For
many years, much of the Western world’s understanding of Israel has been
based on a cluster of myths, from the early fables of the Zionists making
the desert bloom, to Palestine supposedly being a land without people for
a people without land. This intricately constructed and propagated
mythology evolved over time, as Israeli hasbara labored to provide a
perception of reality that was required to justify its wars, its military
occupation, its constant violations of human rights and its many war
crimes. One aspect of the Western perception of Israel is that
the ‘Jewish-state’, which is also a ‘democracy’, has been experiencing a
long-drawn-out battle between rightwing ideologues, and liberal forces
that have labored to preserve Israel’s democratic ideals.
However, such misrepresentations are always grossly at odds with the
reality. Take any aspect of Israeli history that many, even in the Western
hemisphere, now see as immoral and inhumane – for example, the ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinians, the massacres of 1947-48, the racism
against Palestinians who remain in today’s Israel after the Nakba, the
illegal Occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, the illegal annexation of
East Jerusalem, the construction of the illegal settlements, the building
of the Apartheid Wall, and, more recently, the wars on Gaza which killed
over 4,000 people since 2008. Much of these atrocities have the
fingerprints of Labor and their allies. The fact is that it was
the Mapai Party, which was later joined by other supposedly ‘progressive’
forces to form the Labor Party in the 1960s, that has been responsible for
most of the bloodletting, ethnic cleansing and illegal practices that have
pushed the situation to this degree of desperation. The
rightwing in Israel did not achieve prominence until the late 1970s. Prior
to that, Israel was ruled exclusively by Labor governments. Netanyahu’s
current rightwing government officials are by no means short of exacting
utter cruelty in inhumaneness, and the reality is that this behavior is
rooted in a political past. What largely differs between the ‘Right’ and
‘Left’ in Israel is the expression of their political discourses,
certainly not the outcomes. The fundamental reason why some
insist on maintaining that myth – of Israel’s ‘Peace Camp’ compared to the
ominous ‘Right’ - is that they are frenziedly promoting the idea that
Israel is still governed by democratic forces, an assumption that allows
Western governments the time and space to ignore the plight of the
Palestinians. Rightwing leaders like Netanyahu and his coalition partners
are an utter embarrassment to Europe – still a major supporter of Israel -
and they make it very difficult for the United States to even sustain the
charade of its peace process. The West longs for the days when Israel was
governed by less belligerent sounding leaders, regardless of their violent
agendas. Labor governments in Israel, whether those that existed
in the late 40s and 50s, or those that ruled under the leaderships of
Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres, Ehud Barak, etc., never truly showed any
genuine sign that ending the Occupation and granting Palestinians a form
of real sovereignty was ever on their agendas. Do not believe
the hype. Rabin was given a Nobel Peace Prize after the 1993 signing of
the Oslo Accords, despite the fact that Oslo did not give Palestinians
sovereignty or the right to self-determination. Instead, it sliced up the
West Bank into various zones, ultimately controlled by the Israeli army,
and bribed some within the Palestinian elites with phony titles, VIP cards
and mounds of money to play along. Rabin was killed by a Rightwing
Jewish zealot because, as far as the religious and ultranationalist camps
in Israel were concerned, even such ‘concessions’ as a Palestinian flag
and a national anthem, among other symbolic ‘achievements’ offered to the
Palestinians by Oslo, were still considered a taboo. So, when
Herzog threw his hand in the air and postponed any discussion of a
‘two-state solution’ that has been dead and buried for years now, it was
not a sign that Labor had given up or that the level-headed Herzog is
officially fed-up with the shenanigans of Netanyahu and stubbornness of
Abbas. It is a mere contribution of the ‘good Labor-bad Likud’ routine
that the Israeli ruling class have played for decades. The great
irony, though, is that the destruction of the ‘two-state solution’ myth
was the predictable outcome of the illegal Jewish colonies in the Occupied
Territories, which were, interestingly enough, the backbone of the Labor
Party policies following the illegal Occupation of what remained of
historic Palestine after the war of 1967. At the time, rightwing
forces were too insignificant to merit mention. Only the Labor reigned
supreme, which single-handedly took over Palestine and precluded every
chance for a lasting peace. – Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been writing
about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of
several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books include
‘Searching Jenin’, ‘The Second Palestinian Intifada’ and his latest ‘My
Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story’. His website is: www.ramzybaroud.net.
***
Share this article with your facebook friends
|
|
|