ISRAEL
Giving the Enemy Its Opening
By FRIDA GHITIS
Frida Ghitis' latest book is "The End of Revolution: A Changing World
in the Age of Live Television."
July 14 2002
AMSTERDAM -- There's nothing like a national threat to unite a country
behind hard-liners. And there's nothing like a united country to cow moderate
politicians into silence--even when popular extremists make destructive
decisions. Such is the case in Israel today, where the wave of terror
has united the bulk of the country behind Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
archconservative Likud Party, and moderate politicians trying to hold
on to threads of power can think of no better strategy than playing dead.
The Israeli government has undertaken many self-destructive actions in
recent months, but the two it came up with last week seem just plain stupid.
One was a Cabinet vote to back an amendment to an existing land law that
would ban Israeli Arabs from purchasing homes in some parts of Israel.
The other was shutting down the office of leading Palestinian moderate
Sari Nusseibeh, president of Al Quds University and the Palestinian Authority's
highest-ranking official in Jerusalem. The decision to target a man like
Nusseibeh flies in the face of efforts to promote a different kind of
Palestinian leadership. Nusseibeh has denounced the current Palestinian
uprising, saying it is not a popular movement--a real intifada--but rather
a "convulsion of violence." He has loudly and clearly called for an end
to suicide bombings. He has taken the unpopular position that Palestinians
must drop their demand that refugees be allowed to return to Israel proper.
The Oxford- and Harvard-educated intellectual is the antithesis of everything
Israelis fear in Palestinians, a man whose voice Israel should try to
magnify instead of silence.
Nusseibeh was out of the country when Israel's public security minister,
Uzi Landau, a hawkish member of Likud, ordered the closing of the university's
administrative offices, including Nusseibeh's. According to Landau, by
working for the Palestinian Authority within the boundaries of Jerusalem,
Nusseibeh was undermining Israeli sovereignty in the city in violation
of the Oslo accords.
The matter of Israel's sovereignty over Jerusalem is particularly sensitive
to Israelis. Landau used a politically charged term to describe the danger,
saying Nusseibeh could be used as a "Trojan horse," with the university
serving as an arm of the Palestinian Authority.
The Trojan horse metaphor has gained popularity in Israel lately. Moderate
politicians who supported the 1993 Oslo peace process are accused also
of having rolled in a dangerous gift from the enemy, as the Oslo accords
helped create and arm Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority. Many in Israel
believe the flawed peace process, undertaken by the Labor Party, sowed
the seeds of today's disaster.
Reaction against the absurd decision to close Nusseibeh's office did not
come, as it should have, from the top Labor officials holding positions
of power in the Sharon Cabinet. Instead, it came from former Justice Minister
Yossi Beilin, a man viewed by many as a pariah for his role as a key player
in the government of former Labor Prime Minister Ehud Barak, which outraged
conservative Israelis with its far-reaching offers to Palestinians at
the Camp David negotiations in early 2000 during the waning days of the
Clinton administration.
Beilin, who last month challenged the Labor Party's ability to lead the
Israeli left and announced the formation of a new political movement called
Shahar, blasted the action at Al Quds, saying no Palestinian has taken
more risks for peace than Nusseibeh. The sentiment was echoed by Yossi
Sarid, head of the opposition party Meretz, who called the government's
decision stupid.
The hobbling of Nusseibeh, though, seems positively brilliant next to
the proposed land law, a shameful measure introduced by an extreme right-wing
minister and approved by the Cabinet while most of its Labor ministers
conveniently happened to be away, providing them with cover from the controversy.
The bill provides for the legalization of "Jews-only" towns, rural communities
in which Israeli Arabs could not buy homes or even reside. With the Cabinet's
endorsement, the bill now has a clear path to the Knesset, the Israeli
parliament, where it faces legal hurdles. The idea presents a serious
challenge to the country's democracy, prompting Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres to say his Labor Party would "fight with all its power against the
racist decision," even if that were to mean quitting the government. But
the Labor Party has been reluctant to raise its head in opposing Sharon's
policies lately, and it remains to be seen whether it will have the courage
of its convictions.
The prospect of banning Israel's Arab citizens from living in some communities
may sound acceptable to Israelis during this time of constantly looking
over their shoulders for suicide bombers. But when the madness subsides,
it will be apparent that the idea is an affront to the country's humanist
values and its democratic principles. Israelis like to point with pride
to the rights afforded equally to all its citizens, including Israeli
Arabs, some of whom are democratically elected members of parliament.
The land law does more than erode Israel's moral strengths. It is exactly
the kind of discriminatory rule that hands the country's enemies powerful
arguments in their claim that Israel is a racist country--a claim that
has outraged Israelis and Jews for years.
With a majority of Israelis still expressing support for a political solution
and the creation of a Palestinian state, and with many Palestinians desiring
negotiations as well, it is tragic that the extremes have taken control
on both sides. And by its actions last week, the Israeli government seems
likely to ensure that the most extreme elements on the Palestinian side
will gain support.
Copyright
2002 Los Angeles Times
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