There are lots of democracies in the world that are far more secular than the United States (Sweden, France...) and lots of places that want to buy oil at the best possible price (China) without arousing any noticeable hatred in the Middle East.
It is indeed Israel that is the main object of hatred, for
reasons we shall describe, but since the United States uncritically
supports Israel on almost every issue, constantly praises it as "the
only democracy in the Middle East" and provides its main financial
backing, the result is a "transfer" of hatred.
Why is Israel so
hated? The constant stalling of "peace plans" in favor of more
settlements and more war aggravates that hatred, but the basic cause
lies in the very principles on which that state is build. There are
basically two arguments that have justified establishing the State of
Israel in Palestine: one is that God gave that land to the Jews, and
the other is the Holocaust. The first one is deeply insulting to people
who are profoundly religious, like most Arabs, but of another creed.
And, for the second, it amounts to making people pay for a crime that
they did not commit.
Both arguments are deeply racist, with
their claim that it is right for Jews, and only Jews, to set up a state
in a land that would obviously be Arab, like Jordan or Lebanon, if not
for the slow Zionist invasion. This is illustrated by the "law of
return": any Jew, anywhere, having no connection with Palestine
whatsoever, and not suffering from the slightest persecution, can, if
he so wishes, emigrate to Israel and easily become a citizen, while the
inhabitants who fled in 1948, or their children, cannot. Add to that
the fact that a city claimed to be Holy by three religions has become
the "eternal capital of the Jewish people" (and only them) and one
should start to understand the rage that all this provokes throughout
the Arab and Muslim world.
It is precisely this racist aspect
that infuriates most Arabs, even if they do not have any personal
connection to Palestine (if they live, say, in the French banlieues).
This situation de-legitimizes the Arab regimes that are impotent in the
face of the Zionist enemy and, after the defeat of the region's two
main secular leaders, Nasser and Saddam Hussein (the latter thanks to
the US), leads to the rise of religious fundamentalism.
Now,
people often find racism far more unacceptable than "mere" economic
exploitation or poverty. Consider South Africa: under apartheid, the
living conditions of the Blacks were bad but not necessarily much worse
than in other parts of Africa (or even than in South Africa now). But
the system was intrinsically racist, and that was felt as an outrage to
Blacks everywhere, including in the United States. This is why the
conflict over Palestine goes beyond the second class status of Israeli
Arabs or even the treatment of the Occupied Territories. Even if a
Palestinian state were established on the latter, and even if full
equality were granted to Israeli Arabs, the wounds of 1948 would not
heal quickly. Arab leaders, even religious ones, can of course sign
peace agreements with Israel, but they are fragile so long as the Arab
population considers them unjust and does not accept them
wholeheartedly. Palestine is the Alsace-Lorraine or the Taiwan of the
Arab world and the fact that it is impossible to take it back does not
mean that it can be forgotten . (I am not arguing here in favour of «
wiping Israel off the map », or in favor of a « one state solution »
but simply underlining what seems to me to be the root and the depth of
the problem. In fact, I am not arguing for any solution partly because
none seems to me to be attainable in the short term, but, more
fundamentally, because I do not think that outsiders to the Middle East
should propose such solutions.)
There is no sign that any of
this is understood in Israel by more than a few individuals; if Arabs
hate them, this is just another instance of the fact that everybody
hates Jews and it only proves that they have to "defend themselves"
(i.e. attack others pre-emptively) by any means necessary. That is bad
enough, but why isn't this understood in the United States either?
There are traditionally two answers to that: one is that the population
is manipulated into supporting Israel by the government, the arms
merchants or the oil industry, because Israel is a strategic U.S. ally;
the other answer is that the United States is manipulated by the Israel
lobby. The idea that Israel is a strategic ally, if by that one means a
useful ally (useful to, say, the oil interests, broadly understood),
although widely accepted, specially in the Left, does not survive a
critical examination. That may have been the case in 1967 or even
during the Cold War period, although one could argue that, even then,
the Arab states were attracted by the Soviet Union only because it
might support them in their struggle against Israel, albeit
ineffectively. But both in 1991 and in 2003, the United States attacked
Iraq without any help from Israel, even begging Israel not to intervene
in 1991, in order for its Arab coalition not to collapse. Or consider
the post-2003 occupation of Iraq, and suppose that the goal of that
occupation is control over oil. In what sense does Israel help in that
respect? Everything it does (the currents attacks on Gaza and Lebanon
for example) further alienates the Arabs, and U.S. support for Israel
makes the control of oil harder, not easier. Even the Iraqi parliament,
Malaki and Sistani, who are the closest to allies that the United
States can find there, condemn Israel's actions.
Finally, just
imagine that the United States would make a 180 turn and suddenly side
with the Palestinians, as they did with the Kosovars against the
Serbs--who, by the way, were, like the Israelis, richer and more
"Western" than their Albanian adversaries . Such a change of policies
is by no means impossible : when Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975,
the US supported the invasion by providing most of Indonesia's weapons.
Yet, 25 years later, the US supported, or at least did not oppose, East
Timor's accession to independence.
What effect would that
have? Can anyone doubt that such a change of policy would facilitate
U.S. access to oil fields and help it gain strategic allies (if any
were still needed) throughout the Muslim world? In the Middle East, the
main charge against the United States is that it is pro-Israel, because
it lets itself be "manipulated by the Jews". Therefore, if Washington
switched sides, there would be no more basis for hostility to U.S.
presence, including its control over oil. Thus the notion of Israel as
"strategic ally" makes no sense.
This leads us to the "Israel
lobby" answer, which is closer to the truth, but not the whole truth.
To get a complete picture, one has to understand why the lobby works as
effectively as it does, and that depends on factors lying outside the
actions of the lobby itself. After all, the militant Zionists
constituting the lobby are a minority among Jews, who themselves form a
small minority of the American population. The Israel lobby does not
work like other lobbies, for example, the arms and the oil industry
lobbies (which is one of the reasons why it is easy to dismiss it as
irrelevant, as long as one does not understand how it really exerts its
influence).
Of course, like the latter, the Israel lobby does
fund electoral campaigns and its power derives in part from its ability
to target people in Congress who deviate from its "line". But if that
was all, it could easily be defeated Âindeed, there are other sources
of electoral funding, the big industrial lobbies for example, and if
the pro-Israel candidates could be shown to be paid to serve the
interests of another State, their opponents could denounce the people
who receive money from the lobby as some sort of agents of a foreign
power. Just imagine a pro-French, pro-Chinese or pro-Japanese lobby
that would try to significantly influence the US Congress. Certainly,
money alone cannot suffice.
What protects the Israel lobby is
the fact that anyone who would denounce an opponent funded by the Lobby
as a quasi-agent of a foreign power would immediately be accused of
anti-Semitism. In fact, imagine that Big Business is unhappy with the
current U.S. policies (as it well may be) and wants to change them--how
could they do it? Any criticism of Lobby influence on U.S. policy would
immediately trigger the anti-Zionism-is-anti-Semitism accusation.
So
the strength of the Israel lobby resides in part in this second line of
defense, which itself is linked to its influence on the media. But even
that could easily be defeated -- not all the media are under the
lobby's influence, and, more importantly, the media is not
all-powerful: in Venezuela, it is anti-Chavez, but Chavez regularly
wins elections. In France, the media were overwhelmingly in favour if
the "yes" vote to the referendum on the European Constitution, yet the
"no" won. The problem, and that is why the Israel lobby is so
effective, is that it expresses a world view that is accepted too
easily by too many Americans. After all, nothing could be more
ridiculous than accusing someone of anti-Semitism because he wants or
claims to put America's interests above those of Israel. Yet, the
accusation is likely to be effective, but only because years of
ideological brainwashing have predisposed people to consider U.S. and
Israeli interests as identical -- although instead of "interests" one
speaks of "values".
Associated with this identification comes
a systematically hostile view of the Arab and Muslim world, which both
increases the lobby's effectiveness and is in part the result of its
propaganda. Despite all the talk about anti-racism and "political
correctness", there is an almost total lack of understanding of the
Arab viewpoint on Palestine, and, in particular, of the racist nature
of the problem. It is this triple layer of control (selective funding,
the anti-Semitism card, or rather canard, and the interiorization) that
gives the lobby its peculiar strength. (And that is also why it is easy
to dismiss its strength by saying, for instance, that, obviously, Jews
don't control America. Sure, but direct control is not the way it
works.)
People who think that it is the arms or the oil industry
that are running the show in Washington as far as foreign policy is
concerned, should at least answer the following question: how does it
work? There is no evidence whatsoever that the oil industry, for
example, pushed for the Iraq war, the threats against Iran or the
attack on Lebanon . (There is a lot of evidence that the Israel lobby
pushed for the Iraq war; see Jeff Blankfort, A War for Israel.They are
supposed to act secretly, of course, but where is the evidence that
they do? And if they is no evidence, even no indirect evidence, how
does one know? Profits from the war, at least for major corporations,
haven't materialized yet, and there are many indications that the U.S.
economy will suffer a lot from war-related expenses and the associated
deficits. On the other hand, it is enough to open any mainstream U.S.
newspaper or TV and read or hear opinions expressed by Zionists calling
for more war. War needs war propaganda and a supporting ideology, and
the Zionists provide it, while none of this is offered by Big Business
in general or the oil industry in particular.
One may also think
of historical precedents, like the China lobby (made of post-1949
Chinese exiles and ex-missionaries, supported by their domestic
churches) in the 1950's and 1960's. That lobby led the United States to
maintain the ridiculous claim that a billion people were represented by
a government (Taiwan) that had no control over them whatsoever. It was
also very influential in bringing on the Vietnam war. Whose interests
were they serving? The ones of the American capitalists? But the latter
make huge profits in post-Nixon recognized China. And the same is true
in Vietnam.
In fact both countries, as well as most of Asia,
were anti-colonialist and anti-imperialist, as well as anti-feudal
(partly because the feudal structures did not allow them to resist
foreign invasions). But they were anti-capitalist (in the rhetoric,
since capitalism barely existed there) mostly because their aggressors
--the West--were capitalist. So that the main lesson to be drawn from
the tragic history of the China lobby is that it held, during decades,
the US policies hostage to revanchist feudal and clerical forces that
were alien to mainstream America, and actually harmful to capitalist
America. But they worked to the extent that their ideology-- mixing
fear with racist contempt for the "Asian mind" -- was in sync with
Western prejudices. Replace the China lobby by the Israel one and the
Asian mind by the Arab one and you get a fair picture of what is going
on right now in the U.S.-Middle East relation.
What should the
Left do? Well, simple: treat Israel as it did South Africa and attack
the Lobby. The reason Israel acts as it does is that it feels strong
and that, in turn, is for two reasons: one is its "all-powerful army"
(currently being tested in Lebanon, not conclusively yet); the other is
the almost complete control over Washington policy-making, specially
the Congress. Peace in the Middle East can only come when this feeling
of Israeli superiority is shattered, and Americans have a great
responsibility is doing half of the job, the one concerning knee jerk
U.S. support.
Now, there are, in principle, two ways to do
that: one is to appeal to American generosity, the other is to appeal
to their self-interest. Both ways should be pursued, but the latter is
not enough emphasized by the Left . (See Michael Neumann, What is to be
said ?, for a discussion of the ethical aspects of that choice.) That's
probably because self-interest does not appear to be "noble" and
because the pursuit of the "U.S. national interest" has all too often
been interpreted as overthrowing progressive governments, buying
elections etc. But, if the alternative to self-interest is a form of
religious fanaticism, then self-interest is far preferable: if the
Germans had followed self-interested policies in the 1930's, even
imperialist policies, but rational ones, World War II could have been
avoided. Also, if the United States were to distance itself from
Israel, it would pursue policies opposed to the traditional ones, and
far more humane. The other problem is that a large part of the Right
(from Buchanan to Brzezinski) correctly sees American interests as
being opposed of those of Israel, and the Left (understandably) does
not like to make common cause with such people. But if a cause is just
(and, in this case, urgent) it does not become less just because
unsavory people endorse it (the same argument applies to genuine
anti-Semitic hostility to Israel). The worst thing that the Left can do
is to leave the monopoly of a just cause to the Right.
The Left
cannot expect the American people to change radically overnight,
abandon religious fundamentalism, give up oil addiction or embrace
socialism. But a change of perspective in the Middle East is possible:
the strength of the lobby is also its weakness, namely the naked king
effect-everybody fears it, but the only reason to fear it is that
everybody around us fears it. Left alone, it is powerless. To change
that, one should systematically defend every politician, every
columnist, every teacher, who is targeted by the lobby for his or her
views or statements, irrespective of their general political outlook
(to take an analogy, act as civil libertarians do with respect to free
speech).
When people in the antiwar movement divert attention
from Israel by blaming Big Oil or Big Business for the wars (specially
the one in Lebanon, or the threats against Iran) one should demand that
they provide some evidence for their claims. Challenge all the
apologists or excuse makers for Israel or its lobby within progressive
circles. When politicians and journalists claim that Israel and the
United States have common interests, ask what services exactly has
Israel rendered to the United States recently. Of course one can always
point to some (minor) services; but, then, ask them what a cold-blooded
cost-benefit analysis would reveal and why such an analysis is
impossible to undertake publicly. If they speak of common values (the
fall back position), provide a list of discriminatory Israeli laws for
non-Jews.
Rolling back the lobby would necessitate a change of
the American mentality with respect to the people of the Middle East,
and to Islam, like ending the Vietnam war required a change in the way
Asians were looked at. But that alone would have a greatly humanizing
effect on American culture.
It is true that a change in the U.S.
policy with respect to the Israel-Palestine conflict would change
nothing about traditional imperialism-- the United States would still
support traditional elites everywhere, and press countries to provide a
"favorable investment climate". But the conflict in the Middle East,
involving Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, has all the aspects of
a religious war-with Islam on one side and Zionism as a secular Western
religion on the other. And wars of religion tend to be the most brutal
and uncontrollable of all wars. What is at stake in the de-Zionization
of the American mind is not only the fate of the unfortunate
inhabitants of Palestine but also unspeakable miseries for the people
of that region and maybe of the rest of the world. The ultimate irony
in all this is that the fate of much of the world depends of the
American people exercising their right to self-determination, which, of
course, they should.