
From Challenge # 74
July-August 2002
editorial
BREAD OF LIFE versus CULT OF DEATH
For twenty years (1967-87), Palestinians from
the Occupied Territories could freely
commute to jobs in Israel. By nurturing
economic dependence, the security establishment thought to keep the vanquished
quiet: "Full bellies, empty heads." The Intifada of 1987 put an end to this
wishful thinking. Five years later, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin set up
checkpoints, the infamous "closure", ending the unhindered movement of
Palestinian workers. Ever since then, Israel has kept a firm hand on the
spigot, sometimes opening a little, sometimes closing down.
Meanwhile, a new approach went into effect:
while keeping the labor market shut, Israel gave the vanquished a regime with
the trappings of independence. This puppet show was to take charge of their
economy. Seven years passed, and this approach too fell flat. Opposition broke
out, and the puppets got uppity.
Now Israel stands perplexed before 3.5 million
people demanding bread and work. The jobless rate in Gaza is 70%, in the West
Bank 50%. Two-thirds of the population live below the poverty line of $2 per
day. "The approach of 'Occupation deluxe', without taking responsibility, will
soon come back at us like a boomerang. The erection of a fence, high and
formidable though it may be, won't change the fact that as long as no
Palestinian state is declared in the Territories, Israel remains responsible
for what happens there." (Yehuda Litani, Yediot Aharonot
July 4.)
Things may soon get out of hand. We can see
the beginnings of trouble in the demonstrations for
bread (not
sponsored by Yasser Arafat)
that have taken place since June in Gaza. They reached their maximum force to
date on the first of July in a protest of 5000 jobless before Arafat's office
in Gaza. The Israeli leadership believes
the
dissent will contribute to Arafat's downfall. It is doing all it can to bring
this about. Thus it creates a vacuum of leadership in the
Territories. Instead of taking responsibility,
it plays cynically with the fate of the people, keeping "Palestinian society
in a state of flotation on the surface of the water, so that it shouldn't
drown, but only that and no more." (Alex Fishman in Yediot Aharonot,
July 4.)
This game is not just cynical. It is
dangerous. The agenda proposed by Israel and America sets the Palestinians
back many years. After long hesitation, US President George W. Bush made a
speech on June 24 (the product of 27 drafts) that was meant to set the
framework for an overall solution to the conflict. In essence, it expressed
the program of Israeli PM Ariel Sharon, who confirmed his victory in
light-hearted remarks at an economic gathering on July 4. "You thought I
lacked a political program?" he asked the surrounding bigwigs. "I worked on
the plan in secret and brought it straight to the Americans." That is, Sharon
passed over his own government, going directly to World Boss.
The Sharon-Bush concept is not so much a
program as a hot-air balloon patched with speculations. It demands that the
Palestinians undertake basic reforms, administrative and economic, which will
remove Arafat from the center of power. After this condition has been met, a
temporary Palestinian state is to arise, over a
three-year
period, in Areas A and B, that is, in 42% of the West
Bank (the
part over which the Palestinian Authority
[PA]
ruled before "Operation Defensive Shield").
During these three years of temporary statehood – and provided that things
stay quiet – the sides will discuss their final borders, as well as other
thorny questions that the Oslo architects never got to, such as the fate of
the settlements, Jerusalem and the refugees.
The demand for PA reform caused muffled
laughter in the Arab states, for two reasons. First, because the supervisors
of reform are to be those paragons of virtue, Egypt and Saudi Arabia: two
dictatorships, one secular, the other royal-religious. Second, everyone knows
that the West opposes democracy in the countries of the third-world.
"Are Israel and the US prepared to see their
favourite Palestinians put behind bars or barred from public service on
corruption charges? Will the international community insist on municipal
elections if the polls predict Hamas will control a substantial number of
local councils? How will it perceive a legislative assembly empowered to force
the executive branch to submit a peace treaty to a national referendum?"
Mouine Rabbani, "Agendas of Palestinian Reform," Middle East
International, May 31, 2002, p. 26.
In the elementary logic of capitalism, Western
democracies do not support third-world democracies. The political parties in
Western democracies compete for voters, appealing to their economic interests
within the capitalist framework. They must, therefore, EXPLOIT the third world
in order to get the best terms for their own constituencies. The last thing
they want is a third-world country whose parties represent the interests of
the “natives”.
This was the logic, at first, behind Israel's
rule over the Palestinians: it gave them work (i.e., exploitation) without
political freedom. When this attempt ended in explosion, it tried the
opposite: freedom sans work. But political freedom, in the
absence of work, degenerates dictatorship, because only thus can the ruling
apparatus survive against rising opposition.
The demonstrations of the jobless in Gaza are
a protest against PA inaction and corruption. They are also aimed against the
US and Israel, which, with the PA, have made the Palestinians "a people of
beggars," as one of the protestors put it. Yet these demonstrations have
another dimension as well, albeit implicit. Throughout the long months of the
second Intifada, Hamas set the ideological tone, translating its Islamic
agenda into war against the Occupation. The Hamas strategy held that suicide
attacks would bring Israel to its knees. The effect has been the opposite:
Israel is back in the Territories with American sympathy and support, and the
Palestinian millions are helpless.
The jobless of Gaza have put, in effect, an
alternative agenda on the table: "The bread of life, not the cult of death!" A
minimal monthly allowance, to be given them by the PA from the charity coffers
of Europe, may soothe their rage for a while. But as long as the demonstrators
don't organize as a political entity demanding radical change, they will
continue to depend on a corrupt regime that is lackey to the White House.
The sole combination that can solve the
problem of the Gazan jobless, and that of the Palestinian people altogether,
may be found in a formula that neither Israel nor America is willing to adopt:
political rights and economic opportunity. That "and" contradicts the
logic of capitalism, where the third world is concerned. It is the true
Palestinian agenda. It awaits the emergence of leaders to take it up.
By Roni Ben Efrat
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